Read Digital Edition


ADS BY GOOGLE
Top Three Links You Must Click On


Mobile Comms Can Save €43bn in Energy Bills Per Year - Vodafone
Vodafone says that the only way to achieve those goals is for the industry and governments to collaborate

A new report released by Vodafone and Accenture says that the use of mobile communications can reduce the annual energy bill for Europe by a €43 billion, equivalent to an annual reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by at least 113 Mt CO2e (metric ton carbon dioxide equivalents) by 2020. The figure equals about 2.4% of the CO2 emissions for the whole of the EU, or eliminating close to one-fifth of the UK’s emissions.

Obviously, there’s a catch. Vodafone says that the only way to achieve those goals is for the industry and governments to collaborate. The report, titled Carbon Connections: quantifying mobile’s role in tackling climate change, identified 13 opportunities that could enable carbon abatement across 25 EU countries.

But for these opportunities to come to fruition, governments will have to play an important role - like evolving regulation to set an appropriate price for carbon and decreasing free carbon allowances in order to encourage uptake of ICT emissions reduction opportunities, the report said.

vodafone-carbon0709Subsidies as incentives and regulation as law in key areas won’t hurt either, the report continued. “For example, regulation could require the integration of M2M modules into high-value capital equipment or explore more definitive timetables for the roll out of smart grid solutions to ensure widespread uptake and diffusion of the technology.”

Additional government initiatives should focus on promoting interoperability and standardisation in the industry, establishing best practices and benchmarks, support more detail research into carbon reduction opportunities in specific industries, and to promote a cap-and-trade and offset mechanism.

Mark Foster, group chief executive of Management Consulting & Integrated Markets at Accenture, said, “There is a clear and immediate imperative to take further steps to reduce global emissions, and the communications industry will yet again play a pivotal role by enabling the transition to a low-carbon economy. For example being able to access high-definition video conferencing from a mobile device can cut down the need to travel.”

“Every business, large or small, will need to deliver its products and services in a way that minimises both cost and the impact on the environment. This report demonstrates the important role that mobile technology, in particular smart solutions such as machine-to-machine services, can play in carbon abatement while at the same time offering a financial saving for our customers,” said Vittorio Colao, CEO of Vodafone Group. “The challenge is for governments and industry to work together to create the necessary policy framework and investment conditions to stimulate their prompt deployment.”

The applications that cut emissions fall in two categories, the report said - smart machine-to-machine services, and dematerialization.

Smart M2M applications, including smart grids, smart logistics, smart manufacturing and smart cities, represent up to 80% of the potential carbon savings, while dematerialisation applications such as video conferencing, represent the remaining 20% potential in reducing emissions.

Vodafone recently launched a global M2M service platform aimed at helping companies deploy and manage large, wireless M2M projects including smart metering, connected cars, and the remote monitoring of equipment. With the platform, companies will be able to centrally manage and control the process of rolling out M2M devices across several countries, the company said.

“The opportunities identified in the Carbon Connections Report will require approximately one billion connections, 87% of which will be M2M,” Vodafone said. “It also recognises that a significant amount of capital investment is needed to deploy some of the services highlighted. However, the analysis suggests that the carbon pay back is very significant.”

Read the original blog entry...

About Tony Chan
Tony Chan is the founder of the Green Telecom Live website and a seasoned journalist based in Hong Kong. He is currently an editor at CommsDay International, a daily, subscription-based newsletter covering the business, technology, regulation and market developments of the telecommunications industry in Asia and the world.

  Subscribe to our RSS feeds now and receive the next article instantly!
In It? Reprint It! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com to order your reprints!
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters

ADS BY GOOGLE
This past weekend I set out explore some of the extension capabilities of Google Wave. One of the we...
More good news for cloud computing! Google last week released its once mysterious Chrome Operating S...
We talk a lot about social media on Marketing Trenches. And for good reason – Social media seems to...
In CloudBerry Lab we are striving to make our customer service better. In this competitive market wi...
Intel has put out its promised beta SDK for Windows (C and C++) and Moblin (C) developers working on...
InformationWeek stumbled on a Microsoft patent application dating back to 2006 deceptively titled “M...
Berlin-based ThinPrint AG, the printer virtualization house, thinks it’s got a cloud solution for th...
IBM has acquired Guardium, a seven-year-old subsidiary of Israel’s Log-On Software transplanted to M...
But on the web, access to services is implicit in the fact that the business is offering the service...
Behaving like it’s got a future, Sun Monday put out what it calls a significant new version of Virtu...
Oracle has offered to cordon off MySQL inside a combined Oracle-Sun to get the European Commission t...
The second set of charges filed last week against Indian outsourcer Satyam Computer Services founder...
Gartner told Reuters that it overestimated how many PCs Acer shipped in the last seven quarters by a...
Office Web Apps, Microsoft’s answer to Google Apps, are supposed to be out sometime in June along wi...
Gartner thinks the server business has stopped sliding into the abyss. Third-quarter sales weren’t a...
Gartner is buying ~$40 million-a-year AMR Research Inc for close to $64 million in cash. AMD special...
Singed by user reaction to its plans to up the price of its support contracts, SAP Tuesday postponed...
Apparently Google Gears ain’t gonna stick around that long. Google Apps will eventually get their of...
Oracle seems to have divided the open source ranks over the MySQL delay it’s having closing its acqu...
We hear – well, you know how people talk – that Oracle has been quietly meeting with the European Co...