InsightaaS: It is our practice to feature a sustainability-themed item in each Sunday’s Across the Net. It isn’t our practice to carry press releases – but we found this one interesting enough to warrant an exception. Several important sources (such as SMARTer 2020) have highlighted the impact that distributed technology has on power use, and as a result, on GHG emissions. This report from Juniper Research adds more information to this perspective: it holds that because smartphone use is increasing in regions (such as Asia) where coal-fired power plants are the norm, GHG emissions resulting from mobile device charging will double to more than 13 megatonnes in 2019, up from 6.4 megatonnes in 2014. This is a good reminder that although smartphones are small and consume very little power individually, the aggregate impact of these devices is substantial – equivalent, the report finds, to more than 1 million cars.
Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Mobile Devices to More Than Double by 2019, Juniper Research Finds
Smartphone Charging to Consume Almost 14,000 Gigawatt-hours of Dirty Energy by 2019.
Hampshire, UK — 23rd July 2014: A new report from Juniper Research has found that charging mobile devices will generate more than 13 megatonnes CO2e (CO2 equivalent) of greenhouse gases per annum globally by 2019, against an anticipated 6.4 megatonnes this year. Nearly 50% of these 2019 emissions —equivalent to annual emissions from 1.1 million cars — will come from coal-fired Asian electricity grids powering growing smartphone use.
According to the report — Green Mobile: The Complete Guide to Vendor Strategies & Future Prospects 2014-2019 — there is low consumer awareness of renewable energy and sustainable habits in these markets. It is down to vendors to take the lead in making energy companies provide more green electricity for both industry and consumers.
Companies’ Behaviour Can Lead Consumers Forward
The report also notes that where ICT companies have insisted on renewable energy from their grids, energy companies have offered to expand renewable supply to other consumers. It claims that more a widespread adoption of this approach could help lower supplier emissions within the mobile arena.
Companies can have a more direct impact on user emissions by making energy efficient components and apps standard for their devices. This will also have the beneficial effect of prolonging battery life, which has long been a consumer pain point in device use.
Green Business is Good Business
Additionally, the report argues that with eco-ratings playing a larger part in product evaluations, the business imperatives for sustainability are impossible to ignore.
Other key findings include:
– Phone design has a large impact on recyclability, as certain design features make recycling uneconomical. Vendors must plan for end of device life to ensure they do not exacerbate the growing e-waste problem.
– Supply chain emissions still remain a huge problem for the industry. If suppliers can be incentivised to change now, the industry could save a potential 57.8 megatonnes in GHG emissions by 2019.
The white paper, ‘How Green Is My Mobile?’ is available for download from the Juniper website together with full details of the report and the attendant Interactive Forecast Excel (IFxl).
Read the release on Juniper’s site: /ATNJuly27-link