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The greening of IT: It's about results, not technology

The greening of IT: It's about results, not technology

By:  Dan McLean  On: 26 Aug 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

Rather than looking at operating IT and telecommunication systems in a ‘green’ manner, we should be looking at all the ways in which the application of information and communications technology cancontribute to the environment.

In case you haven’t heard, information technology is going “green” — or at least making the attempt. Green is what many IT vendors are promoting as the latest and greatest value proposition for buyers of computing hardware, that environmental concern should be a top-of-mind consideration. In a perfect world, we’d all be motivated to do our part, but a considerable amount of evidence suggests green is far from top-of-mind for many IT purchasers.

In truth, many business and IT professionals couldn’t care less about green. David Senf, a researcher for IDC Canada Ltd., asked a series of “green” questions in a recent survey of approximately 200 business and IT decision-makers. Some of the results were disconcerting.

While a strong majority agreed global climate change was real, 14 per cent said they didn’t believe it was happening.

A total of 53 per cent said global climate change would have a neutral impact on their businesses. In fact, 19 per cent or one in five respondents said they believed global climate change would never impact their businesses negatively. Approximately 13 per cent actually believed there would be a positive or strongly positive impact due to global climate change.

Senf seemed somewhat dismayed that a significant segment of respondents may even be living in denial.

“I think the marketing of the value of being green is going to miss the mark, unfortunately, a lot of the time in Canada right now,” he says. “But, I think it’s a good thing that the vendors do push a green agenda. That can only help firms recognize that it is real and it is a pressing issue, and they do need to do something about it now.”

In a survey of server hardware spending conducted earlier this year by IT World Canada Inc., less than two per cent ranked the green concept of reduced power consumption as among the top two considerations for purchase. Purchase price (almost 60 per cent) and system performance (approximately 55 per cent) were much more desirable to approximately 300 readers of Computerworld Canada who said they are responsible for or are key influencers in the purchase of server equipment for their companies.

Green is a well intentioned idea for IT, but doesn’t yet motivate most buyers, unless of course there’s a buck or two to be gained. Hence, much of the green IT discussion nowadays focuses on energy conservation to the extent that there’s money to be saved. So when most IT buyers think “green” and when most IT vendor sell “green,” they’re really talking about reducing energy costs.

“According to information I’ve seen, data centre power consumption is growing by half every two to three years, even as energy prices continue to rise,” says Charles King, principal analyst for researchers Pund-IT Inc. in Hayward, Calif. “That creates a potential crunch in both power costs and availability, depending on location and region, for many companies.”

However, most of the “green” IT equipment being offered on the market tends to be point products that adhere to what King calls the “classic hammer-and-nail” analogy.


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Dan McLean Dan McLean is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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