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Enter Our Caption Contest & Win a Klean Kanteen

December 2, 2008

We’ve been really excited to have cartoonist Jerry King join us here at EarthFirst.com for our weekly cartoon caption contest. Leave your entry for a funny caption to the cartoon below in the comments section. We’ll pick our favorite and give the winner a brand spanking new Klean Kanteen (a reusable, eco-friendly, bpa-free, stainless steel water bottle). You have until Midnight EST on Friday, December 5th to get yours in for this week. Just leave it in comments. Good luck!

A Guide to Greener IT Culture

May 1, 2008

The IT world has suffered a bit of an image problem in the past couple of years in regards to its eco-friendliness. Some reports claimed that the internet technology industry was responsible for a big chunk of global warming, while others maintained that IT’s contribution is minimal compared to other industries. Regardless, all of this has eco-minded techies wondering how they can make changes that will add up, and the 451 Group of New York has a few ideas to offer.

Greener Computing has it:

  • Measure or estimate IT power use. Energy use lies at the heart of eco-efficiency, and the most successful organizations in establishing a green culture will be those that can set a baseline of energy use and efficiency and then map progress against targets.
  • Buy low-energy or Energy Star products, and publicize this policy.
  • Turn computers off when not used, either centrally, or encouraging users to do so (through labeling, etc.). Discourage wasteful printing.
  • Recycle IT-related waste (toner cartridges, old PCs, batteries, etc.).
  • Publicize successful use of IT that results in a lower carbon footprint — for example, use of videoconferencing to replace air travel.
  • Accept some tactical increased risk where appropriate, through the use of less redundancy.
  • Adopt and publicize policies of organizations such as Carbon Trust, Energy Trust and EU Code of Conduct (for IT).
  • Specify in contracts that suppliers should conform to high environmental standards. Use the Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool to assess these.
  • Buy renewable energy or renewable energy certificates. Publicize this to staff and stakeholders.
  • Seek to understand the relationship between organizational energy use and CO2 production, and create a policy that links any low-CO2 program to IT use.

Videoconferencing, sharing computers, managing the use of power more efficiently and stopping over-provisioning are a few more of the suggestions that can help companies lower their carbon footprint. Taking steps like these can help technophiles feel a lot better about how their daily operations affect the environment, and with as many large IT companies as there are in the US, it could really make a big impact overall.

Link [Greener Computing]

Photo credit: Flickr user exfordy