IT Markets and the Environment

From Lauraibm

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Revision as of 12:43, 14 September 2007


Other Parts of the World

Cross-Industry

UK Financial Services

Key
α What the Customer says about itself looks complete. (But add any further articles you find.)
β What the Customer says about itself has been started but not completed.
γ What the Customer says about itself is not yet started.
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ε .

UK Public Sector

UK Distribution

UK Communications Sector

Utilities in the News

Computer & Professional Services

UK Industrial

The Home

Summaries

Full article: Your Green IT Questions Answered (11-Sep-07)

A panel of three 'experts' answer questions put to them by VNUnet. Some intriguing answers:

  1. To get the board's attention on green issues, focus on cost.
  2. Many outsourcing companies are arguing it's greener to outsource IT to them. The panel seemed to agree that they will be leaders in green IT.
  3. When buying new hardware, customers should factor in the carbon footprint of the manufacturing process.

Full article: More Companies Want Outsource Vendors to Green Operations (20-Aug-07)

A growing majority of corporate decision makers will consider green credentials when selecting outsourcing companies, a recent study suggests. Brown-Wilson Group, a Florida company that studies the outsourcing industry, concluded that more corporations are dumping environmentally-unfriendly outsourcers in a trend expected to continue.

  • Public companies are more likely to work green practices into future outsourcing contracts because of regulatory, shareholder and customer concerns, the survey found. More than 21% of public companies have already added green policies into existing contracts while more than 94% of respondents intend to add green clauses when they go to renegotiate.
  • By comparison, 36% of private companies are now contemplating green policies for 2008 outsourcing contracts.
  • Nearly 90% of outsourcing decision-makers indicated that environmental stewardship will influence the outsourcing choices they will make when contracts come up for bid during the next year.

Why WFH isn't always so green (4-Jul-07)

The electricity used by home PCs doubled between 2000 and 2005, according to the Energy Saving Trust. Consumption is forecast to grow a further 30% between 2006 and 2020 as users install higher-spec (and therefore more energy-intensive) machines. Home-working is often touted as a way of cutting CO2 emissions, but employees should take steps to reduce their power consumption. The difference between an energy-efficient PC with a ‘sleep’ mode and a PC left on 24x7 can be more than £100 per year in electricity. In 2005, 9% of the domestic electricity bill was due to PCs and their peripherals; by 2020, computers and other gadgets will account for 45% of electricity used in the home.

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