Technology and the Environment DD's Eco Notes

Wednesday Jul 25, 2007

Congrats to AMD on exceeding their initial GHG reduction goal, and on setting another aggressive goal. Great job!

As the article mentions, transparency is something that we believe in when it comes to environmental impact, and AMD is setting a great example.

Friday Jul 13, 2007

Last night I got thinking about the industry analyst firms and the environment. This was sparked by Gartner's critique of the Green Grid (accessible here, but only if you have a Gartner account) and Simon Mingay's comments in the press (see "Gartner Dumps on Green Grid").

After my initial reaction ("Jeesh, I know that Green Grid's not perfect, but did it really deserve that at this early stage?"), I started thinking about the value that someone like Simon could bring to the process if he was involved, instead of sitting in the stands and critiquing the calls on the field.

So my question to Gartner, IDC, Forrester, etc, is this: how can you guys get involved in the Green Grid, either directly or indirectly? Its a shame to have a group working together voluntarily on such an important problem, and then to have folks with important data and expertise sitting on the sidelines.

Also, in the course of seeing what some of the analysts are up on the environmental front, I found a ton of whitepapers. So I looked deeper for what they were doing themselves, and I came up totally empty handed. IDC (and their parent, IDG). Gartner. Forrester. Carbon footprint disclosures? Nope. CSR reports? Nada. Environmental impact statements? Zip. CO2 reduction goals? MIA. Collectively billiions in revenue, over 10,000 employees, etc. Did I miss something? (if so, please let me know!)

I found this kind of ironic, since discussions with these organizations have given us some really valuable input on the eco and CSR parts of our website.

Thursday Jul 05, 2007

It's a holiday week here in the US, so a good time for a lighter topic, namely how to talk like a corporate environmentalist. This is a topic which I've done extensive research over the last year, having attending dozens of environmental conferences, having given dozens of talks myself, and having listened to many dozens more.

Its also a timely topic, because at current growth rates, by 2010 there will be over 1,000 conferences with environmental themes each week in the US alone. This means that one out of every 7 US corporate employees will need to be giving environmental talks in order to staff all of these conferences, so its important that we start training those speakers now!

So here's two important techniques to being able to talk like a corporate environmentalist. Try these in your next talk - they'll guarantee that you'll be a hit!

#1 - Focus on The Improvement, Not What's Left to Fix

You'll never hear a corporate environmentalist get up and say "We've cut our methane emissions from 423 to 420 gzillion tons per year". People back at HQ will freak out if you say something like that. Instead, focus on the positive: "We've made dramatic methane emissions reductions of 3 gzillion tons per year!". Doesn't that sound better?

#2 - Make Emissions Accessible, but Not Too Accessible

It's really hard to visualize a ton of CO2 or a gigawatt of electricity, so its important to give your audience analogies that help make your statistics real. The basic approach is to compare to things people know, like cars or houses, as in "This reduction is the same as taking 13,000 cars off the road for a year", or "That's enough electricity to power 10,000 homes for a month. The problem is that someone in the audience might actually know some of these factoids, so you have to actually do the research and the math to make sure your comparisons are accurate - yuck!

Instead, experienced speakers will make comparisons which sound real, but are much less likely to ever be checked. The key is geographic locations and timescales which will demotivate even the most ardent fact checker. Recognizable, but not huge cities (e.g. Topeka, Milwaukee, Edinburgh, Columbus, Dresden), Canadian provinces and recently formed Eurasian countries are all great targets. "That's enough energy to light the homes in Estonia for 16 months" - wow! "That's the same as taking all of the cars in Alberta off of the road for a fortnight" - incredible!