The carbon budget is coming...

... and the IT industry will have to step up to the power challenge

By Gemma Simpson, 12 October 2007 12:36

NEWS

Every UK business must carbon budget when the Climate Change Bill comes before parliament over the next year.

And the IT industry will need to start helping businesses meet their carbon targets, according to panellists at a green computing forum.

The Climate Change Bill has already been drafted by Whitehall and will create legislation that aims to reduce UK carbon dioxide emissions by 60 per cent through domestic and international action by 2050.

This will be based on a system of carbon budgets - which is simply a limit on the total quantity of carbon dioxide emissions a company can churn out over a specified period of time.

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Labour MP Alan Whitehead said, with an election apparently off the cards, the Bill is scheduled to come before parliament within the next year and "represents within a very short period of time, an enormous decarbonisation of the UK economy".

It has been proposed that each carbon budget period should be five years long - starting from the beginning of 2008. Businesses that use less than their carbon quota will be able to trade carbon with those exceeding their emissions target.

Speaking at a Green Computing in Practice roundtable, Whitehead said the Bill relies on a national allocation programme so that each UK business is brought in to the carbon budget programme. Currently only 50 per cent of the industrial economy is within the allocation programme and the system cannot carry on as it is, said Whitehead.

Whitehead added: "The IT industry will need to change from power hungry to green hungry in a short period of time."

Also speaking at the roundtable, David Angwin, European marketing manager at thin computing company Wyse Technology, said: "The IT industry's strength is in its ability to innovate and this [ability] has not been geared towards reducing carbon emissions."

Angwin added the technologies exist today to bring down carbon emissions but companies need to be driven to adopt eco-friendly technologies by understanding the business benefits of going green and having the right, innovation-friendly legislation in the right places.

Businesses have already been faced with eco-legislation - the European Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive came into force earlier this year. The WEEE Directive aims to encourage companies to recycle and reuse their old IT equipment.

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Richard Aylward

    The easiest way to promote lower power consumption throughout the whole of British industry & domestic sector, is to charge a low tariff for the “primary Units Used” (gas & electricity) which would meet a Low carbon & energy target & a very high unit rate for all units used above this target. This would give a great incentive to all consumers to reduce their energy consumption whilst at the same time providing additional funds for the energy producers to improve their own energy efficiency.

  2. 2. anonymous

    But what effective will it have on the Planet?

    None, if the stories about China opening a coal-burning power station every week are remotely accurate.

    Just another GB (that's Gordon Brown) stealth tax?

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