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Friday Morning Green Numbers round-up 02/26/2010

Green numbers

Photo credit Unhindered by Talent

Here is this Friday’s Green Numbers round-up:

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Friday Morning Green Numbers round-up 02/19/2010

Green numbers

Photo credit Unhindered by Talent

Here is this Friday’s Green Numbers round-up:

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Friday Morning Green Numbers round-up 02/12/2010

Green numbers

Photo credit Unhindered by Talent

Here is this Friday’s Green Numbers round-up:

  • Iberdrola Renovables SA, the world?s largest operator of wind parks, agreed to buy Spain?s largest wind farm from Gamesa Corporacion Tecnologica SA.

    Renovables, based in Valencia, paid Gamesa 320 million euros ($441 million) for 244 megawatts of power capacity in Andevalo, Spain

    tags: iberdrola, iberdrola renovables, gamesa, Wind farm, greennumbers

  • IBM recently ran a ‘Jam’ – an online discussion – on environmental sustainability and why it is important for CIOs, CEOs and CFOs to address it. The Jam involved thousands of practitioners and subject matter experts from some 200 organisations. It focused primarily on business issues and practical actions.

    Take a look at the check list below and it becomes rapidly apparent, C-level management need to tackle the issue before it is foisted upon them.

    IBM’s Institute for Business Value will fully analyse the 2080 Jam contributions, but this is the essential CIO checklist derived from comments made during the Eco-Jam.

    tags: ibm, ecojam, eco jam, cio, greennumbers

  • Data centers are, thankfully, getting a lot of attention when it comes to making them more efficient. Considering that roughly 60% of the electricity used at a data center goes to keeping the servers cool, focusing on smart cooling tactics is essential. HP has taken this to heart and has opened it’s first wind-cooled data center, and it’s the company’s most efficient data center to date.

    In this piece, HP claims that their data center is the world’s first wind-cooled data center – I’m not sure just how valid this is as I have heard BT only do wind-cooled data centers!

    tags: hp, bt, data center, datacenter, wind cooled, air cooled, greennumbers

  • “Sir Richard Branson and fellow leading businessmen will warn ministers this week that the world is running out of oil and faces an oil crunch within five years.

    The founder of the Virgin group, whose rail, airline and travel companies are sensitive to energy prices, will say that the ?coming crisis could be even more serious than the credit crunch.

    “The next five years will see us face another crunch ? the oil crunch. This time, we do have the chance to prepare. The challenge is to use that time well,” Branson will say.”

    tags: richard branson, oil crunch, peak oil, virgin, greennumbers

  • “Fertile soil is being lost faster than it can be replenished making it much harder to grow crops around the world, according to a study by the University of Sydney.

    The study, reported in The Daily Telegraph, claims bad soil mismanagement, climate change and rising populations are leading to a decline in suitable farming soil.

    An estimated 75 billion tonnes of soil is lost annually with more than 80 per cent of the world’s farming land “moderately or severely eroded”, the report found.

    Soil is being lost in China 57 times faster than it can be replaced through natural processes, in Europe 17 times faster and in America 10 times faster.

    The study said all suitable farming soil could vanish within 60 years if quick action was not taken, leading to a global food crisis.”

    tags: greennumbers, soil, topsoil, soil fertility

  • In response to an environmental lawsuit filed against the oil giant, Chevron has fortified its defenses with at least twelve different public relations firms whose purpose is to debunk the claims made against the company by indigenous people living in the Amazon forests of Ecuador. According to them, Chevron dumped billions of gallons of toxic waste in the Amazon between 1964 and 1990, causing damages assessed at more than $27 billion.

    tags: chevron, ecuador, greennumbers, amazon rainforest, amazon, toxic waste, pollution

  • Indian mobile phone and commodity export firm Airvoice Group has formed a joint venture with public sector body Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam to build 13GW of solar and wind capacity in a sparsely populated part of Karnataka district in south west India.

    The joint venture is budgeting to invest $50 billion over a period of 10 years, claiming it to be the largest single renewable energy project in the world.

    tags: greennumbers, india, airvoice, solar, wind, renewables, karnataka, renewable energy

  • Using coal for electricity produces CO2, and climate policy aims to prevent greenhouse gases from hurting our habitat. But it also produces SOx and NOx and particulate matter that have immediate health dangers.

    A University of Wisconsin study was able to put an economic value on just the immediate health benefits of enacting climate policy. Implications of incorporating air-quality co-benefits into climate change policymaking found coal is really costing us about $40 per each ton of CO2.

    tags: greennumbers, coal, sox, nox, particulate matter, greenhouse gases, health

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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Energy and Sustainability show for Monday Feb 8th

Watch live streaming video from greenmonktv at livestream.com

We had a great Energy and Sustainability show yesterday – in case you were unable to make it, I recorded the video (above) and the chatstream (below):

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:22
Tom Raftery :

Monday Feb 8th – show kicking off in just under 10 mins
Hi everyone, can you see/hear me ok?

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:31
Joe Garde :

all good tom

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:32
Tom Raftery :

http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_round_up/409887/rbs_labelled_dirtiest_bank_in_britain.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-decock/nuclear-energy-toxic-expe_b_446868.html
http://www.greenpeace.org/international/news/japan-guilty-whaling080210

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:36
jonerp :

Tom, it’s ok, we can drink that nuclear water after the plant is done with it – you gotta mellow out

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:37
Tom Raftery :

http://www.businessgreen.com/business-green/news/2257313/fertile-topsoil-lost-globally
http://tcktcktck.org/stories/climate-news/think-tanks-take-oil-money-and-use-it-fund-climate-deniers
http://www.naturalnews.com/028108_Chevron_Ecuador.html

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:40
jonerp :

God I hate that oil company sponsored pseudo scientific “research”….and I see so called “reasonable” people citing that research all the time…grrrrr…..

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:41
Tom Raftery :

https://secure.avaaz.org/en/chevron_toxic_legacy_5/
http://www.businessinsider.com/goldman-strong-us-manufacturing-data-plus-nigerian-violence-means-oil-will-rally-2010-2
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/feb/07/branson-warns-peak-oil-close
http://www.newenergyworldnetwork.com/renewable-energy-news/by_technology/energy_efficiency/renewable-energy-utility-good-energy-criticises-uk%E2%80%99s-feed-in-tariff-rate.html
http://twitter.com/vkhosla/status/8781076971

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:45
jonerp :

oil energy scarcity is one of the big looming clouds blocking the view of any true long term economic recovery – without more progress on renewable economic and energy models that is.

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:48
Tom Raftery :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/traftery/

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:49
jonerp :

oh, and anyone who thinks that “coal is clean” has never held the stuff in their hands.

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:49
Tom Raftery :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/traftery/4340528102/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/traftery/4339782517/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/traftery/4339781747/
http://www.abengoasolar.com/corp/web/en/our_projects/solucar/index.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wq58zS4_jvM&feature=channel
http://climateprogress.org/2010/02/07/audi-green-police-worst-green-superbowl-commercial/
http://www.audiusa.com/us/brand/en/models/a3.html
http://greeninc.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/quebecs-new-vehicle-emission-law-in-dispute/

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:53
Joe Garde :

tar sands on google maps – http://bit.ly/dsExVN zoom in

Mon, 8 Feb, 16:54
Tom Raftery :

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/7182811/BP-faces-investor-revolt-over-Canadian-oil-sands-project.html
http://news.techworld.com/green-it/3212190/energy-star-rating-for-green-data-centres-to-launch/?cmpid=TD1N5&no1x1
http://www.businessgreen.com/business-green/news/2257160/top-brands-usher-era-green
http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_round_up/411050/uk_joins_calls_for_ban_on_atlantic_bluefin_tuna_trade.html
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/02/cites-supports-international-trade-ban-bluefin-tuna.php
http://planetgreen.discovery.com/work-connect/uhaul-creates-reuse-center.html
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/02/los-angeles-may-get-mandatory-rainwater-harvesting-law.php
http://www.csrinternational.org/?p=6340
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i51zo3LA70U&feature=player_embedded
http://www.symphonyofscience.com/index.html

Mon, 8 Feb, 17:07
jonerp :

Thanks Tom.

Mon, 8 Feb, 17:07
divydovy :

great show Tom, thanks

Mon, 8 Feb, 17:07
Joe Garde :

great Tom.. thanks

Mon, 8 Feb, 17:08
Tom Raftery :

Thanks everyone for your time, interest and contributions

Mon, 8 Feb, 17:08
MikeTheBee :

Well done, I was a bit limited in bandwidth today, so will watch back l8r. Thx

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Friday Morning Green Numbers round-up 02/05/2010

Green numbers

Photo credit Unhindered by Talent

Here is this Friday’s Green Numbers round-up:

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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IBM’s Global EcoJam analysed!

IBM EcoJam Themes tag cloud
Photo credit Tom Raftery

I participated in last week’s IBM Global Eco Jam.

As you can see from above, the event generated 2080 posts from a total of 3987 logins.

I mentioned previously that the quality of the participants in the jam was really impressive, but what were attendees most interested in talking about during the jam?

The screenshot above is a tag cloud of the themes discussed during the jam. And while it gives some idea of the relative importance of topics explored during the jam, I decided to see if I could dig a little deeper into the numbers.

Doing a View Source of this page tells me the pixel size of each of the terms – see below:

12px – air
12px – business_case
12px – city
12px – collaboration_tools
12px – cooling
12px – electricity
12px – energy_savings
12px – improve_energy efficient efficiency
12px – public_transportation
12px – reporting
12px – software
18px – business_processes
18px – carbon_footprint
18px – climate_change
18px – efficient
18px – energy_management
18px – energy_usage
18px – goals
18px – incentives
18px – mobility
18px – smart_grid
18px – solar
18px – working_home
22px – buildings
22px – cities
22px – data_centers
22px – energy_consumption
22px – energy_efficiency
22px – green
22px – power
22px – reduce_energy
22px – supply_chain
22px – sustainability
22px – water
22px – workplace

Unfortunately they only seem to fall into three sizes – 12px, 18px and 22px – so not hugely granular, still it is something.

Clicking on the tags to see the posts doesn’t give an immediate indication of why some are larger than others unfortunately. All of the 22px tags contain 10 posts but so do the 18px and the 12px! Nor does it appear to refer to the number of replies to posts.

It is equally unclear how the tags were arrived at in the first place, apart from this explanation on the site – “A special text-mining tool has identified themes across all of the discussions in Global Eco-efficiency Jam. The theme cloud below illustrates major concepts based on frequency of word use”.

When creating a new post, or replying to previous posts there was no option to tag your responses.

35 posts were identified as being “Hot Ideas” – no idea how or why they were identified as such. It appears to have been a manual process. The hot ideas which generated the most responses (those with >30 replies) were, in decreasing order:

Getting Around – Mobility Services? – 79 replies
Cultural barriers to online collaboration – 58 replies
Greening Your Business Processes for Innovation – 47 replies
Green IT & Cloud Computing – 39 replies
Citizen engagement – 33 replies
Real world customer examples – 32 replies
IT’s Central Role In Managing Energy & Carbon – 32 replies
Integration to improve energy and eco-efficiency – 31 replies

Some of the Hot Ideas had as few as two responses, so the Hot Ideas designation doesn’t appear to come from response number!

Still, despite the lack of transparency around the process, it was an incredibly worthwhile event. I ended up contributing 45 posts (2% of the posts!) which received 46 responses. I learned loads and would definitely participate if IBM decide to hold another (hint, hint!).

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Friday Morning Green Numbers round-up 01/29/2010

Green numbers

Photo credit Unhindered by Talent

Here is this Friday’s Green Numbers round-up:

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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IBM Eco Jam – 1 day in!

IBM Eco Jam Themes

Well, the IBM Global Eco Jam has been underway nearly 24 hours at this point – how is it going?

It has been incredibly active, I have to say. You can see from the screenshot I took earlier this morning that the number of posts was 987 at that point – I just checked now and the number has gone up to 1037! These are across many themes ranging, as you can see in the tag cloud above, from solar panels, through to energy efficiency and buildings.

I have been involved in some terrific discussions on KPI’s, the merits of aisle containment in data centers, the red herring that is phone charger unplugging and reasonably heated discussion on the place of IT in energy management in organisations!

What has really impressed me is the level of expertise of all the participants (except those arguing with me about the role of IT in Energy management 😉 ) and the amount of time people are dedicating to it. Many of the participants have contributed north of 10 posts.

This really is an international gathering of incredible energy mavens, selflessly collaborating (and simultaneously learning) for everyone’s mutual benefit.

It is amazing to be allowed to be part of such an event.

Btw, if you want to take part and your organization’s name is not listed, request an invitation by sending an e-mail to [email protected] with “RSVP” in the subject line.

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Friday Morning Green Numbers round-up 01/22/2010

Green Numbers

Photo credit arekiiu

Here is this week’s Friday Green numbers round-up:

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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IBM’s Ken Bisconti discusses Paper Reduction strategies and the new Smart Archive initiative

I had a chat recently with IBM’s Vice President, Product and Strategy for the Enterprise Content Management, Ken Bisconti. We had a great discussion around enterprise paper reduction strategies and IBM’s recently announced Smart Archive initiative.

Here is a transcription of our conversation:

Tom Raftery:

Hi everyone, and welcome to GreenMonk TV. My guest in the show today is Ken Bisconti. Ken is with IBM, and Ken is the Vice President, Product and Strategy for the Enterprise Content Management Division.

Ken, Enterprise Content Management, that’s basically all the kind of — the papery stuff, all the content that companies create over their lifetime, is that correct?


Ken Bisconti:

Yeah, Enterprise Content Management refers to the management of unstructured content, which comprises about 80% of the world’s business information today. It’s everything from email, and scanned documents, to Compound Document Management, and now archiving content analytics, records management, even case management, business processes; the wide variety of technology with origins back to days of imaging and paper capture.

Tom Raftery:

Okay. Now, I remember back in the 80s people were talking about the onset of the paperless office, and yet, here we are 20 some years later and still there seems to be as much paper as ever. What’s going on? Why aren’t we getting rid of paper?

Ken Bisconti:

Well, about 90% of the world’s content is created digitally. We still find that about half of business information is still sitting in paper today. Much of that is due to the fact that there are business transactions and business to business communication that happens in paper, and from consumers to banks, and from agents to claimants and others, there is a lot of paper traffic that still exists in the world, especially when you think about transactions and the legal requirements around signatures across many different countries or jurisdictions, etcetera.

Tom Raftery:

There is a definite move now away from paper that we are starting to see. Why is that? What are the advantages of digital over paper; I mean paper has worked fine for years?

Ken Bisconti:

It’s a great question. I think that we are now at a point where due to the decreased cost of digital storage and improvements in technology, we are at a point where just the simple storage and retrieval and discovery processes around paper-based business content is not — it is much more cost effective now to take advantage of digital capture.

We at IBM have an effort we call No Paper Weight, which is very focused on helping customers understand the cost of ownership improvement by digitizing their paper records management. Digitizing and automating paper-based business processes. And also using those technologies for not only records management and retention, but also eDiscovery and legal review as well.

Tom Raftery:

Are there other advantages, I mean I can think of environmental advantages for instance, what other kinds of advantages might there be?

Ken Bisconti:

Sure. There is certainly environmental advantages. We have got — I can think of a recent example in one of the county governments in Southern California, where just one simple business process saved them about 1,200 pounds of paper everyday by digitizing that business process. So certainly there are environmental benefits and green benefits to the digitization of paper-based business processes and paper records.

But in addition to that, there are very hard cost savings that customers are able to take advantage of. Often it’s pretty obvious nd our customers, they simply need some assistance in making the cost justification and also understanding how and the best practices to implement some of these policies.

With the digitization of paper you have the advantages of using security technologies, like encryption and access control, to secure who is retrieving and interacting with content that is being stored and managed and part of the business process. And naturally with any digitization and digital storage of information, you have the ability to take advantage of disaster recovery and availability technologies, such as clustering and offline storage. So there are tremendous advantages in security and reliability and availability, not just the cost savings and storage.

Tom Raftery:

You guys made an announcement in October about your Smart Archive initiative. What was that about?

Ken Bisconti:

We did. In October we announced across IBM initiative we call Small Archive. It is focussed on a very holistic view of information life cycle management and information life cycle governance. The basic concept is that we want to provide our customers a consistent way to collect and archive both structured and unstructured content. This ranges from structured information like application archives or application datasets from ERP systems, like SAP and Oracle, using some of our opt-in technology as an example.

It includes email and paper capture and collaborative content from Lotus and SharePoint, chat transcripts, faxes, etcetera. One consistent way that we can collect and archive that content.

We also provide the ability to classify that content based on rules or manual classification, or even an advanced automatic classification technology which uses natural language, linguistic analysis to help identify business content versus non-business content.

We also combine that optionally with records management software and eDiscovery collection and review technology. This is possible using our ECM software.

And one of the components of the Smart Archive strategy is the introduction of new delivery methods. We are introducing a new appliance-based delivery method we call the IBM Information Archive. That will be delivered in the first half of 2010. And through our Global Technology Services Team we are also going to provide these same capabilities in a Smart Cloud offering, an Information Archive Cloud service, which also will be available in the first half of 2010.

I know one recent large retail bank we had in California, 10,000 plus employees, bank with 300 plus branches, they had a single investment in this space that had over 260% returns, and I think their payback was in less that nine months on the overall early investment. They invested maybe three to three-and-a-half million dollars and had returns over a few years of over 30 plus million.

Tom Raftery:

Okay. With any of these new technologies Ken, you are always going to see some verticals going gung-ho and others being a bit more reticent. Are you see seeing that in this as well?

Ken Bisconti:

In this context we tend to find our traditional interest has been in financial services related industries: retail banking, insurance. We have also found that there has been tremendous interest in public sector environments, local and state governments, federal and country level governments.

We have also seen energy in utilities, telecommunications, even retail and manufacturing, but I think that it would be fair to say that traditionally a lot of the interest has existed around financial services, government, and energy utility firms.

Tom Raftery:

So if a company is looking at this and maybe interested in trying to see, is it for them, would they save money? Do you have any kind of a way; someone can model to see if they can save money doing this?

Ken Bisconti:

We do. As I said earlier, we have a program we call No Paper Weight, I’ll provide you with the URL. And you could always search for IBM ECM anywhere on the Internet and you will be directed to our content, which can also guide you to the No Paper Weight initiative, where you will find ROI calculators and white papers, even including case studies of other organizations that have done this before; how they have justified it and some of the fantastic returns that they have gotten from these investments.

Tom Raftery:

Super! Ken, that’s been fantastic. Thanks a million for coming on the show.

Ken Bisconti:

My pleasure Tom. Thank you.

[Disclaimer – IBM sponsored the production of this video]