Cisco, HP, Sony To Work on Networking Energy Efficiency

11/18/2010
SustainableBusiness.com News

A new industry workgroup, including Cisco (Nasdaq: CSCO, HP (NYSE: HPQ) and Sony Electronics (NYSE: SNE), will begin work developing energy efficiency targets and best practices for networking technologies.

The Climate Savers Computing Initiative said the expanded focus of the organization will include improving the energy efficiency of networking equipment such as routers, switches and connected devices that power everything from the Internet to mobile technologies.

The Networking Workgroup brings together new and existing leadership from the global tech community. Other participating companies include CompTIA, Emerson Network Power, Finisar (Nasdaq: FNSR), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) and Juniper Networks (NYSE: JNPR).

A study of electricity use in commercial and residential buildings conducted by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in 2008 concluded that networking equipment used 18 billion KWh in the U.S. alone. While the energy use of networking equipment is currently only a small percentage of overall building and computing energy use, it is expected to grow by more than 6% per year as the number of networking devices in use by consumers and enterprises increases.

Climate Savers Computing estimates that the global IT industry can negate 38 million metric tons of CO2 emissions by 2015 through the development and deployment of more energy efficient networking equipment worldwide. That is equivalent to $5 billion in energy cost savings and 51 billion KWh in energy savings, enough to avoid the use of more than nine coal-fired power plants.

"Climate Savers Computing continues to identify new areas for increasing energy efficiency in IT equipment,” said Lorie Wigle, general manager of the Eco-Technology Program Office for Intel Corporation and president of the Climate Savers Computing Initiative. “Our expansion into networking is designed to address and reduce the environmental and economic impact of the devices and systems by developing and deploying global standards that will provide enhanced design, delivery, and adoption of high efficiency electronics."

Research has shown that a workplace can reduce its energy use by more than 10% through conservation practices and networking efficiency measures.

The workgroup’s charter specifies that the organization will:

Following its initial phases, the Networking Workgroup will turn its focus to the energy efficiency of network communication with connected devices in home and business environments. The workgroup also intends to develop alliances with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and other key stakeholders to formalize networking energy efficiency criteria.

Since the founding of CSCI in 2007, the global IT industry has reduced annual CO2 emissions by more than 32 million metric tons through the deployment of PC and desktop power management and high efficiency computing equipment, according to the Climate Savers Computing Initiative

Website: www.climatesaverscomputing.org