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The Green Issue

The Green Issue

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 21 Apr 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Experts tell us where we're making progress reducing IT’s environmental impact -- and where we’re not

Employees across the four offices of the David Suzuki Foundation have gradually migrated up the ladder of green communication technologies over the years, fundamentally changing how they do business.
 
“Now everybody knows travelling is just too costly and hard on employees. Nobody likes to travel by air anymore,” said Peter Robinson, CEO of the Vancouver-based environmental non-profit organization that bears the name of its founder.
 

With satellite offices in Montreal, Toronto and Ottawa, staying connected is vital, but for an organization whose message is environmental sustainability, Robinson said travel-free communication was not up for debate.

 

Green strategy

Internal communications at the David Suzuki Foundation has been happening by way of videoconferencing for several months now, a green strategy with roots in basic teleconferencing. Robinson estimates a savings upwards of$50,000 annually from cutting back on flights, hotel and meal expenses.
 
The Foundation boasts indirect benefits as well, though they are harder to quantify. “Certainly we know it means that people are more focused and they are not burnt out as they normally are through travel,” said Robinson.
 
The spotlight on green IT has faded in recent years, but that’s certainly no indication that organizations have made much progress, said Simon Mingay, lead green IT analyst with Gartner Inc. based in the U.K. “That doesn’t mean it’s over and done with. Far from it,” said Mingay.
 
Organizations still have a long way to go even with basic initiatives, “low-hanging fruit” like videoconferencing, data centre cooling and energy use, consolidation and virtualization, Mingay said.
 
Once that initial phase is realized, Mingay said the next steps should tackle more complex initiatives that can be foggier in terms of return on investment. Dynamic energy management, for example, challenges the long-standing mentality of leaving things to run as they always have. “It works, so just leave it,” said Mingay of the traditional thinking. “That’s what I’m being measured on — does it work?”
 
It doesn’t help that energy is cheap either, leaving people to care little about greenhouse gas emissions. Mingay said the primary motivating factor behind any green IT strategy continues to be business efficiency. “You could completely remove the green word from it,” he said.
 
One problem inhibiting a green IT strategy is the lack of tools with which to demonstrate green progress, said Tom Baumann, CEO with ClimateCheck Corp., a consultancy that measures success in reducing greehouse gas emissions. “If you can’t really measure and have some confidence and certainty in improvements or the change, it’s difficult to be comfortable with knowing if you got the full ROI,” said Baumann.
 
But it’s not just about the lack of tools. There’s also a need for standards that are specific to particular systems performance rather than relying on general measures, said Baumann. The problem is, a standard that reads “plus or minus 20 per cent on an ROI is going to raise a few eyebrows,” he said.
 
Ottawa-based ClimateCheck created a global Web-based platform for standards development that aims to address the cost and labour of the process. While the initiative has taken off, Baumann said there is still much work to do.
 
Aaron Hay, research manager with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group Ltd. said that although cloud computing and virtualization are ranked as the top initiatives for 2010, IT departments still aren’t installing green measurement tools at the data centre nor desktop level.
 

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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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