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Energy Use Implications of ICT Hardware NATO SCIENCE PROGRAMME in conjunction with the Carnegie Bosch Institute ADVANCED RESEARCH WORKSHOP: Life Cycle Analysis for Assessing Energy and Environmental Implications of Information Technology Budapest, Hungary September 1-3, 2003 by Andrius Plepys
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Why the issue? Dynamism of ICT sector Productivity and structural impacts Role in sustainable development Climate change policies Energy security
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Energy and the New Economy Period Reduction rate of energy intensity Source 1960-96 (“old Economy”) 1.3 % (EIA 2001) 1973-86 (oil crisis) 2.6 % (Laitner 2000) 1996-99 (the New Economy) 3.4 % 1996-01 (N.E. incl. IT stock crash) 2.8 % (Laitner 2002) Decoupling between GDP growth and energy consumption often attributed to ICT sector
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Electricity crisis – a hoax or a reality? New York, August 15, 2003
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Internet to blame for the blackouts? Electricity consumption increaseSilicon ValleyRest of California Residential consumption19.6 %18.1 % Non-residential consumption15.4 %15.1 % Total16.5 %16.0 % derived from California Energy Commission’s data (2002) El. consumption dynamics in Silicon Valley and California, 1990-2000 Interests of power suppliers (coal industry) Poor planning and artificial price increase?
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From Mills to LBNL National estimates of AEC CountryReliability20002010 Sources USA high 2.72 – 4 ADL (2002) low 2 – 82 – 50 several studies Japan medium 3.34 NTT/FRIC (2002) low 4.330 ISTEC (2000) Germany medium 4n.a. Aebischer* (2003) low 0.5 – 1.76 Barthel/Turk (2001) Bottom line< 3-4%<5-6% ? ICT-related electricity consumption as % of national AEC
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However… Absolute consumption will increase Future predictions are fuzzy Reportedly large energy saving potential
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Electricity consumption by component in non-residential sector Source: Roth et al. in ADL (2002)
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The power of power management CPU – idling >90% of the time Hardware actively used <25% of the time (Webber, 2001) PM already saves 25%, but additional 15% could be saved by optimal set up (US EPA, 2002) Largest saving potential in offices: desktop computers/workstations CRT monitors Copiers & printers (Kawamoto et al., 2001)
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The two legs of power management Technology solutions Behavioural solutions - software (BIOS OS) - products (CRT LCD) - components (CPU) - awareness - knowledge - informed choice
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Relevancy of the issues - DC example High power reliability costs dearly Overestimated needs Consumption insignificant on national scale, but a large share of ICT infrastructure HVAC – largest consumer DC’s energy Saving 20-40% technically feasible today HVAC optimisation (air water, CHP, t o ) night switching Economic barriers (large build-up, risk aversion)
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The impacts of trends Wireless communications Mobile devices LCD displays ICT diffusion into other products Optic fibre – broadband – data traffic The “last mile” limitations Voice and data n-work convergence E-services
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Shortcomings Methodological and data issues: ICT definition and system boundaries Allocation procedures Data: Behavioural data (!) Power rating Stock data and return rates
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Reflections Electricity consumption – not significant today, but future is uncertain Growth rate and saving potential makes it important for continuous research Supply side: energy efficiency not always a design priority (often a trade-off with costs) Demand side: marginal role of energy costs to encourage savings (hardware costs, performance, ergonomics before environmental considerations)
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Technology can take care of some efficiency improvements Behavioural changes are needed to fully exploit the potential savings Market “failure”? Reflections
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A role for policy makers? Economic instruments (e.g. green taxes) Informational voluntary instruments (performance standards, labelling initiatives) Governmental procurement for more energy efficient equipment more research on policy role
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