Picture of Paul Coby
Coby: it is really important that we understand what the environmental costs of running technology are

BA puts green IT at the top of its agenda

Airline lends support to Green Computing campaign

Written by Lisa Kelly and Dave Friedlos

British Airways (BA) is placing environmental policies and practices at the heart of its strategy this year, and has given its backing to our Green Computing campaign.

The airline industry is regularly criticised for its contribution to carbon emissions, and earlier this year the government doubled the amount of passenger duty people pay when taking flights from the UK.

But BA’s chief information officer Paul Coby says the firm is very conscious of its environmental responsibilities and IT is central to improving its practices.

‘Everybody has a part to play and Computing is absolutely right in its green campaign,’ he said.

‘Clearly from an airline point of view we are committed to doing a lot in terms of the issue such as with air passenger duty, but on the IT side it is really important that we understand what the environmental costs of running technology are.’

Coby has asked IT operations staff to document green costs.

‘I want them to bring an overall green audit to my leadership team. For example, costs to do with running two data centres and global networks,’ he said.

BA already follows environmentally-friendly IT policies including responsible disposal of hardware, but Coby acknowledges that more can be done.

‘We get kit reconditioned by a charity and it is used by a teacher training pool in Nairobi,’ he said. ‘However, I am sure we can do more and we have a focus this year to do things to lessen our carbon footprint.’

The firm announced its financial results last week, reporting record annual sales of £8.5bn.

While profits slumped £100m, BA has increased IT spending by seven per cent.

A spokesman says the increase is modest but the productivity gains that have occurred because of the spending are significant.

‘The IT department has targets to improve efficiencies and that has been successful,’ he said. ‘We have rolled out systems that deliver more for less.’

Computing reported last week the airline is considering testing mobile phone-based tickets.

Sign up to our Green Computing campaign at:
www.computing.co.uk/greencomputing

reader comments

related articles

BA planes

BA completes six-year IT overhaul

Integrated maintenance system replaces 150 legacy systems across fleet 19 Sep 2006

 

British Airways increases IT spending

Airline ups IT investment despite sluggish performance 18 May 2007

BA pilots T5 technical systems

Rigorous testing of Heathrow Terminal 5’s technology begins ahead of 2008 opening, says Dave Friedlos 12 Apr 2007

Poor countries call for climate change levy on air passengers

Proposals for global levy in contrast to aviation industry's call for cap and trade 07 Apr 2009

Virgin America launches offset service

In-flight and point-of-booking service will allow customers to offset easily 08 Dec 2008

Low-carbon vehicle funding unveiled as Heathrow "sweetener"

Government announces £250m cash injection to help car industry retool for low-carbon economy as part of "green" transport package, but campaigners remain unimpressed 16 Jan 2009

related whitepapers

today's top stories

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

Habitat gets a web site makeover

The furniture retailer is revamping its online presence to provide a fully transactional web site. CIO Jacques Dekock explains why 02 Jul 2009

Government aims to bolster UK's cyber defences

Is the UK’s first national cyber security strategy up to the task of co-ordinating the country’s response to digital threats? Computing investigates 02 Jul 2009

Focus resources on what really matters

IT has become too caught up in the drive for efficiency, at the expense of business success 02 Jul 2009

From tracks man to tax man

Phil Pavitt, outgoing chief information officer for Transport for London, talks to Rosalie Marshall about the lessons he will take to his new role at HMRC 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Tell us what you think about job hunting through LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter etc

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

network cablesVideo

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

green footprintsVideo

How to manage enterprise energy use - and the role IT can play

A panel of experts explore how firms can get to grips with their carbon footprint and make smarter use of energy 01 Jul 2009

Latest in-depth articles

Phil PavittAnalysis

From tracks man to tax man

Phil Pavitt, outgoing chief information officer for Transport for London, talks to Rosalie Marshall about the lessons he will take to his new role at HMRC 02 Jul 2009

UPS worker making a deliveryAnalysis

Global standardisation delivers benefits at UPS

Delivery giant sees benefits of central IT solution 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Primary Navigation