Manawatu Standard

How emails hurt the environmen­t

It sort of sounds like satire but sending emails and watching Netflix can have a negative effect on the environmen­t, writes Hayley Tsukayama.

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How do our tech habits affect how much power we use and the environmen­t? Finding an answer is harder than you may think. After all, the energy you use at your desk writing a typical email isn’t all the energy that an email uses.

A story started making the rounds last week about French energy regulators asking companies to cut back on email in order to save energy.

It sort of sounds like a satirical piece – it did, in fact, end up in Reddit’s ‘‘Not the Onion’’ subsection – but the suggestion really does come from the French regulator, RTE.

As the French warning indicates, there’s a whole infrastruc­ture behind every message, which includes not only the electricit­y you use but also the energy it takes to store and transmit that informatio­n through data centres.

Many researcher­s have looked into the carbon footprint of these types of technology – meaning the amount of greenhouse gas produced to support the activity – to measure the impact they have on the environmen­t.

This is commonly expressed in the volume of carbon dioxide. Using more energy tends to produce a larger greenhouse gas emission, but using alternativ­e forms of energy that don’t burn greenhouse gasses can also reduce a technology’s carbon footprint.

We were able to come up with some rough estimates about how your tech habits affect the environmen­t. Your ultimate impact will, of course, depend on the way you power your own home – solar, wind, et cetera.

Email

The average spam email has a footprint equivalent to 0.3g of carbon dioxide emissions (CO2E), according to carbon footprint expert Mike Berners-lee’s 2010 book How Bad are Bananas: The Carbon Footprint of Everything.

A normal email, according to that book, has a footprint of 4g of CO2E, which accounts for the power data centres and computers spend sending, filtering and reading messages. An email with a ‘‘long and tiresome attachment’’ can have a carbon footprint of 50g CO2E.

Berners-lee estimates that a typical year of incoming mail adds 136kg of emissions to a person’s carbon footprint, or the equivalent of ‘‘driving 200 miles (321km) in an average car’’.

On a larger scale, he says that the world’s data centres in 2010 accounted for 130 million tons of CO2E, or a quarter of a per cent of the world’s global total. Bernerslee projected that the world’s data centres will produce 250 to 340 million tons CO2E by 2020.

An hour of streaming video

Netflix itself said that, in 2014, that the average customer had a carbon footprint of 300g per year. Though, it must be said, that didn’t factor in the power consumed by devices – just the energy used delivering the service itself.

Netflix has since made its service carbon neutral, including the power it uses through Amazon Web Services and its own Open Connect program.

Greenpeace did give Netflix a D in its annual report of tech companies environmen­tal practices. The report that the firm has attained some of its carbon neutrality by buying offsets rather than encouragin­g its cloud providers to switch to cleaner energy source. That includes Amazon Web Services, which earned a C in the same report.

Watching television

The power consumptio­n, and therefore the carbon footprint, of your television obviously depends quite a bit on what kind of television you have.

If you want to find your own television’s consumptio­n, try heading to the Energystar website, which will let you find products that have been certified as energyeffi­cient and give you their consumptio­n informatio­n.

Again referring to Berner-lee’s book, an hour of television viewing on an old 32-inch CRT television was rated at 84g CO2E for an hour’s worth of watching television, while a 15-inch LCD television generated 37g. A 42-inch plasma television, however, generate the most with 240g CO2E.

Playing video games

Game consoles can be power hogs, at least according to a 2014 report from the Natural Resources Defence Council.

Game consoles are often put into a standby mode instead of being completely turned off, which contribute­s to the power they draw.

Overall, the NRDC estimated at the time that game consoles drew as much electricit­y each year as the city of Houston. The study has not been repeated with the newest consoles each company has announced last year. Since the study, however, Microsoft introduced a new power-saving mode designed to reduce how much power it guzzles.

Streaming music

Here, again, the numbers are fuzzy – so fuzzy, in fact, that numbers were hard to come by at all. But a 2013 article cited in The Washington Post estimated that streaming an album 27 times used up the same amount of energy as producing and shipping a CD. So if you’re wondering whether streaming a song is better for the environmen­t than buying it on CD, the devil is in the details.

In all cases, the question of how harmful any given activity’s energy use may depend in part on the company you’re using. Several companies, including Apple, Google and Netflix, have all committed to using clean sources of energy for their data centres – and, in many cases, are increasing the percentage of clean energy they’re using for their services each year.

If you’re worried about your energy bill, then paying attention to consumptio­n alone is probably what you need to pay attention to the most. If you’re concerned about your carbon footprint, then researchin­g how the companies you use source energy is also worth a look. – Washington Post

 ??  ?? A normal email has a footprint of 4g of CO2E, which accounts for the power data centres and computers spend sending, filtering and reading messages.
A normal email has a footprint of 4g of CO2E, which accounts for the power data centres and computers spend sending, filtering and reading messages.

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