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Where is Microsoft’s Green story?

I just got back from Microsoft TechEd IT Forum 2007 in Barcelona. The company’s new strategy seems to be… if it moves virtualise it, if it doesn’t move virtualise it anyway, and if its virtualised already then virtualise it some more and manage it. Microsoft is determined to lose a reputation for workload inefficiency, and the virtualisation story makes for great motherhood and apple crumble stuff, but would it hurt the firm to at least mention green issues in the efficiency context? A day and a half and the only conversation about greening was at the dinner table.

A couple of questions then absolutely floored me: “Are Europeans still obsessed with carbon footprints? Why?” As I responded – with oil at nigh on $100 a barrel, we’re all green now. Simple but brutal economics is now the green advocate’s best friend. It seems totally absurd to me that some people, notably in central governments, are still arguing that efficiency initiatives might “hurt the economy”. Can you imagine a CEO arguing it makes no business sense to become more efficient? Well actually yes but that’s autistic cost-benefit analysis for you.

Microsoft likes to see itself, somewhat justifiably, as taking a long term view on things. Its technical marketing people take evident pride in eschewing what they see as the “latest fads”. Service oriented architecture (SOA) is a good example of same. While other vendors, most notably IBM, were developing the market Microsoft sat on the sidelines looking grumpy, saying ‘there is no such thing as SOA”. Three years later or so and it finally jumps on the bandwagon. For Microsoft though, virtualisation is not a fad but The Real Deal.

And yet… shouldn’t a company that prides itself on the long view be more, rather than less, obsessed with carbon emissions,efficiency and maybe even the future of the planet? Virtualisation and greener data centers make great bed-fellows, as vendors such as Cassatt are doing a great job of articulating, and with that in mind some opportunistic marketing and development would make sense. Microsoft should go and talk to US energy and utility companies and ask about bills and rebates for customers that run more effective IT operations. It could startwith PG&E, which actively recommends customers virtualise their data centers through rebates and a campaign called wecandothis.

One of the refreshing things about Microsoft is the dorkness of much of its market conversation. It tends to avoid the kind of business process hand-waving most major vendors prefer. At Microsoft there is a genuine belief that if you provide great tools to technical people they can do great work. Their pitch is to practitioners rather than CIOs. In my experience though practitioners are just as worried about the future of the planet as any of their their pointy-haired bosses, if not more so. It would be fantastic to see Microsoft marketing green from the roots up.

I don’t see Microsoft leading the corporate social responsibility (CSR) and related green debates. its about time it did. We need a better plan A because there is no plan B.

picture of construction work at Gaudi’s masterpiece La Sagrada Familia courtesy of Mishkabear. Thanks!

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Ban The Bag: First Modbury, Now London

What a heartening way to start the week.

Just yesterday I was thinking it was great that Modbury has now officially banned the plastic bag. BBC Nature’s Rebecca Hosking deserves all the plaudits she is recieving for leading the campaign. But it could never happen in London, I thought.

That was, until I read the Daily Telegraph this morning (its not my usual tipple, but I was on a plane) and saw a story on page 9, London Shops May Stop Giving Out Plastic Bags.

“Shops in London could be banned from handing out plastic bags under a new law.”

The initiative comes from London Councils, the umbrella group representing all local authorities in the capital: shoppers would have to bring their own bags or buy reusable ones at the till. To be fair, retailers such as Marks & Spencer and Sainsbury have already made great strides in this regard, offering nice jute bagsand so on, but a legal restriction can help a lot to really drive a behavioural change.

For those that consider such schemes to be an “outrageous attack” on their liberty I would encourage them to consider the 4bn plastic bags a year that go to landfill in the UK each year. Perhaps a more encouraging thought should come from the smoking bans in major European cities. Arriving at Barcelona airport this morning was so much more pleasant and welcoming than usual. Smoke really has no place in public buildings. One day we may feel the same about using plastic bags. [So much for a new libertarian-minded bias… Ed.]

Its a shame the BBC doesn’t put its considerable weight behind the plastic bag campaign on a national basis, which would be an excellent use of license fee money, as far as i can see, tapping into grassroots concerns about the environment. Why not give Rebecca a show and a campaign?

But, you can’t always hope for top down support. As the Telegraph reports, another option would be to introduce a tax on plastic bags, “but such a move is likely to be rejected by the Treasury.”

As usual in the UK, leadership isn’t coming from the top. Well done London Umbrella. I hope you succeed.

Next… the world?

picture courtesy of polandeze, take on a Sheffield canal.

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Green plants: well what colour would you expect them to be?

If you’ll excuse the rather feeble pun in the title (nice picture though!), I wanted to note something that has caught my attention-namely the speed at which the IT industry systems vendor debate is moving on from green data centers to end to end green plant management. Air-conditioning is so wasteful and overused. I was pushing for green facilities management at some of my IT vendor clients last year, but it seems that now the idea’s time has come. With energy prices rising the economics are far clearer. Efficiency won’t ruin economies, it will keep them alive.

Paul Kurchina, Director of Communities for ASUG, the SAP Americas User Group, started the ball rolling again for me when I met him recently and he pointed out that OSIsoft was doing some good work in the area. The chance to drive more efficient and effective plant and facilities management seems such a natural opportunity for SAP I am a bit surprised it hasn’t pursued it more aggressively, particularly given its Lighthammer acquisition last year.

IBM it seems may be rushing in to fill the gap, opening a new front in its cooperation/competition with the German software giant. IBM’s acquisition of MRO software and its Maximo application is the catalyst for change. While the acquisition was ostensively intended to fill out a hole in IBM’s Tivoli service management toolset, namely a service desk, MRO’s broad portfolio also offers extensive management capabilities for non-IT assets. A recently completed tight integration between MRO’s Maximo and the ESRI geographical information system (GIS) makes the platform even more applicable.

Needless to say however all the monitoring and management software in the world won’t be any use unless it ties into the existing plant automation, air-conditioning systems and so on, which is where the likes of GE and Rockwell Automation come in. IBM is already aggressively courting these firms.

It seems to me that SAP and IBM are going to need to work together. Service automation won’t be useful if it isn’t tied into ERP, financial and other systems. I am definitely not as well informed as i need to be though. I will let you know more as I learn more about it. I wrote recently that not all automation decisions make sense, but some obviously do

picture courtesy of Noel Lee. Thanks Noel!

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Stop The Madness: run events where your people are

I love Lisbon. Its a fantastic city. I love Portugal. Great country. But the more I think about it the more absurd it seems that IBM flew a bunch of analysts and staff there for a conference last week, particularly given that one of the key themes of event was economic greening.

The simple fact is that the great majority of people attending were from London.  The industry analyst business in Europe is not particularly geographically distributed. I don’t believe there was a single Portuguese analyst at the show. Most of the IBMers were based in London too.

I think one idea behind holding such events in various far-flung venues is to “share the love”, not favouring one geography over another. Another reason is just the loveliness of the place.

I appreciate that the analyst business is fairly unusual but many industries do travel a lot. But couldnt’ we do things closer to home? Pareto distributions are likely to indicate the best place to hold an event.

Not only would running last week’s event in London have been far less carbon intensive, but it would also have been far less impactful on our productivity and home life. Missing half days of work on either side of a journey is hardly ideal. Even worse, as far as I am concerned, is missing my family. I got home at 11:45pm, having eaten nothing but a pretty nasty British Airways sandwich, and my wife was already in bed. I don’t know about you but its nice to actually get some decompression time.

No rest for the wicked. This morning I just got back on a redeye from New York. The situation in this case was somewhat different. IBM held its US event in Stamford, Connecticut,which is in easy driving distance of most of IBM’s senior executives. What is more it is the home of the biggest and most successful analyst firm in the world- Gartner Group.

I must admit that last year I was slightly put out by the fact “we were all travelling to Gartner”. It just seemed a bit off that all of the other analyst firms, including RedMonk, had to go into Gartner territory. Today I hope I am looking at the situation in a more mature fashion. I hope fewer Gartner people had to travel either, saving more carbon miles.

So what is my call to action? Hold events where the people are. London may be more expensive than other cities, but its where most of the people in my business at least live and work. if you’re organising a conference find somewhere close to home. Don’t travel unneccessarily. You might even consider using a tool like dopplr so that you know where your co-workers are going to be at any given time,so you can reduce travel accordingly. I met a guy from IBM yesterday who was doing exactly that.

And perhaps we will all have better home lives, as well as doing our bit for our carbon footprint. It makes sense to me. What about you?

 

picture of the Statue of the Discoveries, Lisbon, courtesy of Welland.

 

 

 

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This is not a drill: on climate pron and air conditioning

Today I read that, according to the UN, greenhouse gas emissions from richer nations have risen to their highest levels since 1990. We’re moving in the wrong direction, it seems. Greenmonk normally tries to avoid “climate pr0n” but sometimes the cap just fits.

It seems to more that more sacrifices are required. Technology isn’t magic. We need to do more. And what am I doing? Getting on a plane to New York for an IBM event, my second foreign trip with the vendor in two weeks. Are you thinking what I am thinking? More on this later…

One thing that really does my head in though. What’s the first thing I do when I check into a hotel room? Turn the air conditioning off… One thing globalisation can’t mean is a steady 68 degrees Fahrenheit.

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BT in perpetual motion: Living Lightly and SMB greening

BT is on a roll at the moment. Shame we can’t package its perpetual green drumbeat as perpetual motion. Seriously- what other major FTSE company is doing so much to educate different sectors on greening issues?

A couple of days ago the firm was announcing the results of an Economist Intelligence Unit study it sponsored into corporate sustainability. Now BT informs me that its launched a new SMB program called Living Lightly. The simple but effective idea behind the slogan and campaign is that small firms can make a real difference to the national carbon footprint.

Its a core GreenMonk belief that small things add up (my favourite example is Google’s adwords revenues), and it seems BT is thinking the same thing:

“Small steps – when taken by a large number of individuals – make a big difference. With 4.3 million small businesses in the UK alone, the collective impact could be incredible.”

Amen to that.

At first glance the actions BT suggests look pretty self-serving:

  1. Take up conferencing
  2. Reduce unnecessary trips back to the office by using mobile communications technology
  3. Turn off office equipment at the end of the day
  4. Recycle
  5. Take-up flexible working

But as someone that has been to Lisbon and back this week for an IBM conference that could just as easily have been held in or around London, where the great majority European industry analysts seem to work, I think there is something to be said for looking at alternatives to travel. I am not alone- I heard the other day that PriceWaterhouseCoopers employees are now being asked to make personal steps to reduce their business travel.

Here are my own suggestions:

  1. Cycle to work
  2. Unplug your mobile phone chargers when its not in use
  3. Buy local services if at all possible

BT borrows heavily from the Pledgebank Model – Tell The World I Will Do It But Only If You Help with each pledge for sustainability growing the LiveLightly tree…

You on the move? “Drive more slowly – driving at 50mph uses 25% less fuel than 70mph.”

You at work? “Bring your own mug into work and don’t use paper or plastic cups.” What – why shouldn’t drink tea out of solidified petrol?

What can I say – this is goodness. Why do I big up BT so much? Why not- it should be encouraged to do more cool stuff.  In terms of using social software and quirky approaches BT is showing the way forward. Don’t hector- encourage. Green isn’t just for big companies. We all have to make a difference.

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Greening the UK, carbon-busting through iGoogle

Google today gets all my love. They have just built a great interface and set of carbon-busting mashups, leveraging the AMEE back-end. You can calculate footprint, but also post videos through Sky about your own carbon-busting efforts.

According to AMEE:

Google’s implementation is based on the underlying Act on CO2 data provided by Defra and others. It makes some additional assumptions (based on data from the Energy Saving Trust) to get the number of questions down to a “manageable” few pages (specifically around appliances).

I am particularly pleased to report this initiative is driven by Google UK. sweet. Anyway- go check it out.

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Wake Up IT: Wait Til You See Your Energy Bill

I realise Greenmonk is not about green data centers, but I am at an IBM conference and its a core issue here.  I am going to do writing it up in some depth, but I called out IBM’s efforts in a blog here, titled Globalisation’s Green Core.

One issue that absolutely screamed at me however, which ComputerWorld readers should perhaps be aware of, is that many IT organisations have never had to fully consider their electricity consumption. Electricity is a “cost of doing business”, which comes under a facilities management budget. However with increasing energy costs bringing these budgets under increasing scrutiny, facilities managers are beginning to present IT organisations with a bill. This is a huge game-changer, and if your IT organisation isn’t thinking green now, it will be when you get the bill.

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Save The World Or Get Rich Tryin’

Greenmonk: Save The World or Get Rich Tryin’. I must get some t-shirts made up with that slogan – If I do would you like one?

Reuters concurs, according to ecototality, based on a quote from Deutsche Bank.

“The climate change markets are being created by governments through their regulation,” said Mark Fulton, tbank’s (Deutsche Bank) global head of strategic planning and climate change strategist.

“Whether you believe the science or not, investable markets are being created by governments, and these investable markets we think will grow significantly over the next 20 to 30 years,” he said at the launch of a report on climate change investment.

greenback picture courtesy of yonanimus

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Celebrity Gossip for Greener Outcomes: outstanding

I got a tweetback today from @michaeldestries so I went to check out who he is. It turns out a green enterpreneur and consultant. So far so good. So what’s the ecorazzi thing then, I wondered? When I got to the site I was floored. Its basically a perfectly executed celebrity gossip site – but bright green. Lots of humour. Nice photoshop montage of Paris Hilton in an ice-cube (she wants to be cryogenically frozen with her dog. It can’t happen soon enough if you ask me.)

I think most people would rather hear from an ecorazzi than an eco-nazi.

The team is pretty big – which helps explain how they pump out so many stories, with such a slick editorial look. You guys are my new heroes. Its like Go Fug Yourself wearing green. Making green sexy- and nothing sells better than sex. Maybe green really is the new black…

Thanks Sophie Monk and PETA for the image above. That’s a chili shot.

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