Green Gauge October 2007

From Lauraibm

(Difference between revisions)
Line 23: Line 23:
==Fuel Cells==
==Fuel Cells==
 +
{{Fuel cells_the alternative}}
==Green Computing==
==Green Computing==

Revision as of 10:17, 9 October 2007

Contents

Climate Change

The Green Imperative

Carbon Offsets

Combined Heat and Power

Customer Activity

Full story: BP Team with MIT for Clean Energy Research (28-Sep-07)

BP has signed a 5 year commitment to the MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Energy Initiative; the pair aim to explore ways of transforming materials such as coal into electricity, liquid fuels and chemicals with the hope of slashing carbon dioxide emissions.


Data Centre

Full story: Don't Wait on Green IT to Spruce Up Data Centres, Experts Say (1-Oct-07)

Experts in the IT industry have recommended that companies make simple reconfigurations to their IT hardware to help free up energy and space in the data centre. They have been advised not to wait for advanced technologies to take root due to a lack of guidance from the federal level which is likely to cause a slow in the pace of innovation on the energy-efficiency front.

Individual Efforts

Green Consortia

Vendor Efforts

Full story: Companies Decide to go Green (1-Oct-07)

Greenpeace released its "Guide to Greener Electronics" in September 2007, which ranked 14 manufacturers of computers and mobile phones according to their policies on toxic chemicals and recycling.

The company rankings are in descending order: Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Dell, Lenovo, LG, Sony, Fujitsu-Siemens, Samsung, Motorola, Toshiba, Acer, Apple, HP and Panasonic.

Nokia has been on the top of the ladder since August 2006. Lenovo who has moved up the ladder from the lowest rank in August 2006 now ranks fourth. At the bottom of the ladder are Panasonic, HP and Apple.

HP is now in 13th place down from 6th. It has weakened its support for individual producer responsibility. It was the first company to devise an electronic waste take-back/recycling metric based on a percentage of sales, yet it has failed to provide timelines for the complete elimination of PVC (Plastic Polyvinyl Chloride) and all BFRs (Brominated Flame Retardants).

Full story: Electronics Companies Green up Their Acts (19-Sep-07)

Greenpeace has launched its latest edition of a “Guide to Greener Electronics”; the changes show that many major electronics firms have made huge improvements since the guide was first launched in August 2006. Not only have the companies that were ranked near the bottom of the previous edition made improvements to move up the table, but companies not even featured in the ranking have made improvements in their policies with the aim of being greener. In fact, the only company seen to fall in each of the rankings is Hewlett Packard.

The initiative has also seen many improvements in company practice since August 2006; with a number of companies now offering free take back programs for old electronics. There has also been an increase in the number of products available without the worst toxic chemicals e.g. PVC plastic.

These results demonstrate the effectiveness of publicly comparing the performance of these companies to help make improvements in environmental policies.

Fuel Cells

Full story: Fuel Cells The Truly "Alternative" Energy (24-Sep-07)

Fujitsu has recently chosen to install a fuel cell to allow them to clean their energy, the corporation decided to install a fuel cell rather than use solar or wind energy as they believe it to be more dependable and take up less space. Although the fuel cell market is currently far smaller than other alternative energy markets, it looks to be growing and it has been estimated that by 2016 fuel cell sales will reach $15.6 billion.

At present fuel cells are very expensive, thus government incentives have been needed to spark the industry, however, the costs are falling as bigger orders lead to the economies of higher volume production.

Green Computing

Full story: 5 Signs The Computer Industry Is Finally Going Green

There have been several recent developments coming from the high-tech sector which demonstrate that the computing industry is gradually finding a green conscience. Such initiatives include;

  • Dell’s plan to be carbon neutral by 2008
  • Solar powered workstations
  • Green data centres
  • USB 3.0, set to become available in 2009, promising energy savings
  • The Climate Savers Computing Initiative aims to reduce computer energy use by 90% by 2010; this is expected to provide a saving of $5.5 billion in energy costs.

Greenwashing

Company Processes

ISO 14000

Peak Oil

Politics

Printing

Recycling

Renewable

Software

Wind Power

Glossary

Personal tools