The tussle for the top of our Cool IT Leaderboard has taken its latest twist, with Google grabbing the top spot ahead of 20 other tech companies, including Cisco and Ericsson.
Pitching global IT companies against each other to find who comes out top in the fight to stop climate change, the 5th edition of the Leaderboard compares the firms on their IT Climate Solutions, IT Energy Impact and Political Advocacy.
Google is way ahead on climate solutions and energy impacts, thanks
to its disclosure of its energy footprint, and for providing its
impressively detailed mitigation plan for achieving emissions
reductions. On top of this, Google continues to speak up on important
climate change policies, and make its voice heard on the immediate need
for both US and EU governments to aggressively cut emissions.
Unfortunately though, there was a notable drop in scores on political
advocacy across the industry. With the urgent need for cuts in global
greenhouse gas emissions, tech firms are failing to speak up against
that dirty energy companies guilty of stalling climate change policy
debates at all levels of government. This is troubling; the IT industry
is full of environmental rhetoric but simply doesn’t seem to be taking
any real action. This is not tenable - the industry expanding too fast,
and has too much potential for helping cut global emissions to just
stand in the shadows.
Several companies dropped points for pushing vague plans to mitigate
their climate footprint, and for the lack of any plans for powering
their future data centres with renewable energy. To remedy these
problems, companies need to become more transparent on their investments
into IT solutions that work to mitigate climate change and future
emissions savings goals.
However, with the possibility of introducing new climate clever
solutions and expanding into emerging markets such as India, the tech
business have an opportunity to create a greater demand for renewable
energy that will ripple into other parts of the economy. The industry’s
energy footprint is growing, and with so many new communities gaining
access to mobile phones, tablets, and green building techniques that use
innovative IT technology, it won’t be decreasing anytime soon.
In fact, in the SMART 2020 report
released nearly four years ago, it was projected that the Internet’s
energy consumption will triple by 2020. But the sector can actually make
a dent in global emission cuts in that same time frame by contributing
to clever climate solutions by allowing people to measure their
electricity consumption. While it is exciting to see the leadership by
some of the companies on the Leaderboard, like Google, it is
disappointing that the industry as a whole is failing to actualize its
real potential.
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