-----Original Message-----
Feed: Environment: Climate change | theguardian.com
Posted on: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 6:45 PM
Author: Environment: Climate change | theguardian.com
Subject: Constant access to wireless networks has an environmental cost

Cloud computing should be driving sustainable development, but its turning us 
into energy consuming monsters, write Stuart Newstead and Howard Williams

(Stuart Newstead runs Ellare, an independent consultancy, before that he held 
senior strategy, business development and commercial positions at telecoms 
operators O2 and BT. Howard Williams is Professor emeritus, University of 
Strathclyde.)

There is a familiarity and comfort in our almost-everywhere connection to 
always-on communications networks and to the ever-increasing array of services 
they deliver us. We don't just consume these network services directly, they 
give us what economists call "options" - options to connect, options to seek 
out new services, options to find new information. Clearly we don't use this 
network services 24/7, but we value highly the options for instantaneous and 
simultaneous access at any time.

Cloud-based applications - those stored and managed by massive data centres run 
by the likes of Amazon, Google, Facebook or Apple - are providing step changes 
in the financial and environmental efficiency of delivering these services. But 
the centralising power of the cloud has its corollary in the dispersing effect 
of wireless networks and devices.

In wireless networks and devices we see fragmentation, duplication and a 
fundamental shift from mains power and green sources of energy to battery 
powered always-on devices. In environmental terms here lies the rub. Rather 
than the "aggregation of marginal gains" (the Sir Dave Brailsford strategy that 
has propelled success in British cycling), in which lots of tiny improvements 
add up to a large visible improvement, we are witnessing the aggregation of 
environmental disadvantages from billions of low-powered but fundamentally 
energy-inefficient antennas and devices providing the 'last metre' connectivity 
to global networks.

Wireless networks and devices, technologies that should drive sustainable 
development, are turning into energy-consuming monsters.

The challenges posed by the transformation of the sector are addressed in The 
Power of Wireless Cloud (PDF), a paper from The Centre for Energy-Efficient 
Telecommunications (CEET) in Melbourne. The paper calculates that the CO2 
burden of building and maintaining mobile networks has been overlooked in 
wireless cloud calculations, especially the antennas and wireless routers that 
provide connections to smartphones and tablets. CEET estimates that from 2012 
to 2015 wireless cloud computing will add 24 megatonnes of carbon, taking the 
sector's total emissions up to 30 megatonnes, the equivalent of putting around 
4.9m new cars on the road.

The usual assessment of the sustainability benefits and costs of wireless cloud 
computing considers the actual consumption of applications and technologies and 
compares these with existing ways of performing those activities. Vodafone and 
Accenture analysed this in their joint report Carbon Connections, which claimed 
that 13 opportunity areas, such as mobile health, could reduce carbon emissions 
by 113 megatonnes per year.

What CEET has done is to put a quantification on the carbon required to gain 
24/7 access to the wireless cloud, whether or not it is actually used. But more 
importantly the report focuses attention on the poverty of offsets as a 
solution to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, arguing that we should 
ultimately be seeking net downward changes in carbon footprints. If we are to 
deliver these we will have to review our love of always-on capability and our 
substitution of renewable energy-efficient centralised power supply by 
dispersed and relatively inefficient battery power.

In the wireless cloud we have the complete opposite of the Brailsford cycling 
strategy. It is the visible datacentres, like the gold medals, that we tend to 
count when we consider the sustainability implications. The personalised 
devices and ubiquitous antennas are so common, so fragmented and so marginal 
that we lose sight of them, but they are born to run and rarely switched off.

This fragmentation and its carbon cost consequences are what the CEET report 
has highlighted. Despite the massive growth in use of smartphones and tablets, 
the reality is that they - and the antennas connecting them to the networks - 
still spend an awful lot of time on standby and costing carbon, rather than in 
active use and saving carbon.

Very few people doubt the benefits to society and economies that wireless cloud 
computing can bring, but the CEET report shows that sustaining always-on global 
mobile connectivity in the way we do now is highly unsustainable.




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