Sustainable IT is the design, production, operation, and disposal of IT and IT-enabled products and services in a manner that is not harmful and may be positively beneficial to the environment during the course of its whole-of-life [1]. Sustainable IT requires the responsible management of resources (both IT and non-IT) encompassing environmental, economic, and social dimensions. The first wave of sustainable IT, Greening of IT, aims to reduce the 2% of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for which information technology (IT) is responsible [2], by reducing the footprint of IT thought actions such as improving the energy efficiency of hardware (processors and disk drives) and reducing waste from obsolete hardware. The second wave of sustainable IT, Greening by IT, also called Green IT 2.0 [3], is shifting the focus toward reducing the remaining 98%, as illustrated in Figure 50.1, by focusing on the innovative use of IT in business processes to deliver positive sustainability benefits beyond the direct footprint of IT, such as monitoring a firm’s emissions and waste to manage them more efficiently. The potential of Greening by IT to reduce GHG emissions has been estimated at approximately 7.8 Gt CO2 of savings in 2020, representing a 15% emission cut in 2020 and 600 billion ($946.5 billion) of cost savings [2]. It is estimated that the use of IT for greening will play a key role in the delivery of benefits that can alleviate at least five times the GHG footprint of IT itself [4]. This chapter provides an overview of sustainable IT best practices followed by discussion of the challenges faced by IT organizations in delivering sustainable IT. Green for IT practices covered include how software should be designed to minimize its resource usage, how the energy efficiency of data centers (DCs) can be improved through the use of virtualization, air management, and cooling, and the life cycle assessment (LCA) process that is used to determine the environmental impact of a 50
[1]
Christian Belady,et al.
GREEN GRID DATA CENTER POWER EFFICIENCY METRICS: PUE AND DCIE
,
2008
.
[2]
C. Davis,et al.
Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices
,
2012
.
[3]
W. Marsden.
I and J
,
2012
.
[4]
Ralph Horne,et al.
Life Cycle Assessment: Principles, Practice and Prospects
,
2009
.
[5]
A Special Report on Managing Information
,
2022
.
[6]
Edward Curry,et al.
System of systems information interoperability using a linked dataspace
,
2012,
2012 7th International Conference on System of Systems Engineering (SoSE).
[7]
Vanessa A. Cooper,et al.
E-Readiness to G-Readiness: Developing a Green Information Technology Readiness Framework
,
2008
.
[8]
Brian Donnellan,et al.
Sustainable Information Systems and Green Metrics
,
2012
.
[9]
Brian Donnellan,et al.
Understanding the Maturity of Sustainable ICT
,
2012
.
[10]
Aaas News,et al.
Book Reviews
,
1893,
Buffalo Medical and Surgical Journal.
[11]
Steve Elliot,et al.
Environmentally Sustainable ICT: A Critical Topic for IS Research?
,
2007,
PACIS.
[12]
Nigel Melville,et al.
Information Systems Innovation for Environmental Sustainability
,
2010,
MIS Q..
[13]
Eric Saxe,et al.
Power-efficient software
,
2010,
Commun. ACM.
[14]
Martin G. Curley,et al.
Managing Information Technology for Business Value: Practical Strategies for IT and Business Managers (IT Best Practices series)
,
2004
.