Mobile sector to slash carbon footprint 40% by 2020: GSMA
John C. Tanner |
November 19, 2009
telecomseurope.net
The GSM Association has called on the mobile sector to cut carbon emissions 40% by 2020 – and wants governments worldwide to adopt policies helping it hit that target.
Under a new “Green Manifesto” announced by the GSMA at its Mobile Asia Congress, the mobile sector aims to reduce total global greenhouse gas emissions per connection(which excludes M2M SIMs) by 40% by 2020. That target includes energy sources directly under cellco control, such as the radio network, buildings, and transport.
The manifesto also calls on the mobile industry to maintain its global carbon footprint at 245 mega-tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (Mt CO2e) over the next 11 years, even as the GSMA expects to grow the number of mobile connections 70% to eight billion in that time frame.
The calculations do not include the GSMA’s current initiative to install 118,000 alternate-energy base stations by 2012, which would save an extra 6.3 million Mt of carbon emissions.
Equipment vendors – while not GSMA members – are also covered in the manifesto. The GSMA intends to work with equipment vendors to ensure that the life cycle emissions of network equipment components are also reduced 40% by 2020.
Device-makers will also be encouraged to reduce handset power consumption – either in standby more or in active use – 40% by 2020. The GSMA’s universal charger project, which calls for a standard, more power-efficient charger by 2012 that can be used with any handset, is intended to play a major role in that goal.