13 May 2008
The European Commission (EC) has started a major consultation on how IT can help cut EU energy use by 20 per cent by 2020.
The EC is consulting industry, governments and academia, prior to a report next year outlining action needed and detailing possible regulation.
"Research and rapid take-up of innovative energy efficient ICT solutions will be crucial to lowering emissions across the whole economy," said Viviane Reding, commissioner for information society and media, who launched the consultation.
The IT industry must improve its own hardware efficiency, as well as enabling energy savings through the use of online services and remote working, the EC says in an accompnaying report.
“The objective of this activity will be to foster co-operation and understanding among all the actors involved in the energy and IT domains, including regions, cities and authorities,” it says.
The initiative aims to tackle the problem by sharing best practice internationally, and encouraging EU-wide uptake of technologies such as smart buildings, lighting solutions and metering.
Last month Viviane Reding proposed to increase the budget for IT and energy efficiency in the 2009-2010 EU work programme by 48 per cent to €40m (£31.5m).
Reducing energy consumption in the EU is considered the EC’s largest problem: energy use in the EU will double by 2030 if action is not taken soon, says the report.
Independent research last year by AeA Europe estimated that IT could directly enable up to 50 per cent of these reduction targets.
But a survey published last week by Forrester found that UK firms have yet to introduce green IT: almost 50 per cent had no environmental criteria in procurement practices, while 45 per cent had no green IT strategy at all.
Have your say on this article
Newsletters
Latest stories from Government
Latest videos
You may also like
Government jobs
Technology Patent Wars
Case studies from large organisations across all sectors
... And rich media, and flexible working, and peaks in traffic ...
Upcoming Events
Join us for this Computing web seminar, in which the Head of BI at the Co-operative Group Nick Colebourn will be explaining just how he reigned in the Group’s sprawling database estate and how significant savings were realised and data quality improved as a result.
Date: 31 May 2012
Time: 11:00 AM
Live June 13th 11:00am: Register now. During this web seminar we will be looking at the sorts of incidents that can bring data centres grinding to a halt and what can be done about them.
Date: 13 Jun 2012
Time: 11:00 am
Receive the latest jobs direct to your inbox
Are you being paid what you are worth?