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Environmental futures Ian Hill, Chief Sustainability Officer, Openreach The contents of all the slides presented today are provided for guideline and discussion.

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Presentation on theme: "Environmental futures Ian Hill, Chief Sustainability Officer, Openreach The contents of all the slides presented today are provided for guideline and discussion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Environmental futures Ian Hill, Chief Sustainability Officer, Openreach The contents of all the slides presented today are provided for guideline and discussion purposes only and represent no commitment from BT

2 Contents  Climate change & the ICT industry  Openreach activities  Ethernet & the environment

3 The quest for excellence Sector Winner 2001 – 2008 Sector Winner 2007 - 2008

4 300ppm 200ppm 18°C 15°C 7°C -400,000 -300,000 -200,000 -100,000 today average temperature of earth carbon dioxide level in atmosphere 385ppm Source: Carbon Sense 285ppm 200ppm

5 50% global reduction on 1990 levels by 2050 Average world GDP growth at constant prices (1980 to 2007) = 3.6% pa Decoupling of world CO2e emissions from economy (1990 to 2007) = 2.4% pa Net business as usual growth of world CO2e emissions = 1.2 % pa 50% reduction = 450ppm CO 2 = 2 o C temp rise

6 Total greenhouse gas emission pathways 2015 peak Anderson & Bows. 2008 Philosophical Transactions A of the Royal Society. 366. pp.3863-3882 Emissions of greenhouse gases (GtCO 2 e) Year 200020202040206020802100 0 20 40 60 80 2020 peak 2025 peak

7 The weather is changing  Average temperatures rising, with more extreme heat waves  Rainfall patterns are changing with increased risks of flooding  Ground conditions are changing (landslides, subsidence and heave)  Glaciers are melting  Permafrost is thawing  Sea levels are rising  Storm surge heights are increasing  Intensity of storms is increasing

8 Global value of saved energy and carbon = >€640b pa by 2020 www.smart2020.org The ICT industry & climate change Risk & opportunity

9 ICT industry & climate change Carbon reduction commitment  Mandatory UK carbon trading system  Large potential penalties (and rewards) based on energy consumption performance - public league tables;  Applies to organisations with half hourly metered electricity, and who consumed over £0.5m equivalent in 2008 - 5,000 UK businesses;  Letters from the Environment Agency in July 2009 to billing addresses of relevant properties, asking organisations to identify whether or not they qualify;  Commences in April 2010, but is based on billable energy consumed during calendar 2008 and requires preparation now

10 Openreach emissions reduction Targeted activities  Sustainability  Emission reduction  Fleet improvements  Waste reduction  Responsible product development

11 Sustainability: Hierarchy of needs Corporate reputation & retention Disruptive market innovation & competitive advantage Physical plant & infrastructure adaptation Legal compliance & regulation EU Electronic Waste Directive 2002 UK Climate Change Act 2008 EU Emissions Targets 2020

12 Emissions & waste A whole ecosystem 2. Less demand created by re-use of existing products 1. Less material shipped 3. Less product deliveries 4. Less gas used to shrink 5. Fault savings = less truck rolls = less co2 6. Re-use = less landfill

13 Emissions Not a load of hot air! 23,500 vehicles Over 200,000,000 miles a year Over 30,000,000 litres of fuel 4-6 tonnes CO2 per annum 150 visits and c£400 per tonne

14 Improving our fleet  Existing fleet  Smaller, lighter and more economical vehicles  New, lighter vehicle racking and equipment – For every 100kg change in vehicle weight, fuel consumption rises by 0.7l per 100km  Road speed limiters  10% fuel challenge Low carbon fleet feasibility  Electric  Diesel electric hybrid  30% Bio Fuel  2-Man Tonner

15 Openreach waste A few throwaways BT total 80k tonnes pa >25% via TECs <45% Openreach £24 / tonne in 2007 £48 / tonne in 2010 Every year we put into the network: – 80,000 poles – 2m loop kms of copper – 7,000 types of engineering material

16 Total waste is reducing & recycling % has doubled 000 tonnes 26% 34% 42% 46%

17 Responsible product development Connectivity services: environmental benefits ► More accurate testing means less visits ► Potential to offer CPs access and managed control of service network termination electronics ► Reduced power consumption lowers costs… ► EBD moves Backhaul supply from individual point-to-point services with a per service multiple set of electronics and associated per service fibre deployment to a shared infrastructure model ► EAD Aggregation - plans to offer multiple circuit Tails through common hub site electronics and individual handover electronics ► EAD Flex - active electronics at the end user site 150 fewer visits = 1 tonne of co2 emissions less Removes the need for CPs to deploy additional electronics …and co2! Should lead to a lower industry footprint Reduces units produced and overall power consumption Should consume far less power than EAD electronics

18 Summary  Environmental impacts are important considerations  Underestimating them will impact business success  Our Connectivity Services portfolio evolution is already part of this future  To make a difference we need our customers on board


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