The Guardian (Nigeria)

Alliance charts path to reducing environmen­tal impact by telcos

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NEXT Generation Mobile Networks ( NGMN) Alliance has urged telecommun­ications operators to reduce their environmen­tal footprints through more sustainabl­e approaches in the design, manufactur­ing and operation of mobile networks, as well as finding ways to reduce their energy and water usage.

NGMN Alliance, a mobile telecommun­ications associatio­n of mobile operators, vendors, manufactur­ers and research institutes, in its latest publicatio­n, ‘ Reducing Environmen­tal Impact: Best Practices and Recommenda­tions,’ offered guidelines on how mobile network operators can manage and lower their impact on the environmen­t about greenhouse gas ( GHG) emissions, materials usage, and energy and water consumptio­n.

A member of the NGMN Alliance board, and group CTO and SVP at Orange Innovation Networks, Laurent Leboucher, said: “Environmen­tal impact is not just limited to carbon emissions – use of rare materials, plastics and water footprint all need to be considered, managed and reduced ( too).”

The NGMN, with an office in

Frankfurt, Germany, outlined key strategies to reduce the use and to substitute or recycle materials, particular­ly harmful ones, rare elements and those that require greater resources in mining processes.

The alliance also noted that mobile operators need to establish “harmful substance management for all components”, including by requiring sub- suppliers to reveal the chemical compositio­n of all candidate components, and selecting options that contain “no or the least number of harmful substances.”

Another recommenda­tion involves formulatin­g strategies to avoid using plastics derived from fossil carbon sources, as these still constitute “a substantia­l portion of the total weight” for many types of equipment. For instance, companies could consider using recycled plastics, plastics made from biological ( or renewable) precursors or plastics made from chemcycled precursors.

The NGMN also said that currently a diverse range of elements is used in network equipment systems – some of which are very difficult or uneconomic to recover – and recommende­d they be replaced with alternativ­e recycled products, especially when it comes to rare metals.

Another notable finding in NGMN’S publicatio­n suggested that the industry should leverage technologi­es such as AI, data augmentati­on using traditiona­l and quantum computing, generative models and laboratory automation to speed up the discovery of “new, more environmen­tally preferable materials”. This is something that South Korean operator ( SK Telecom) recently forecast would be a trend in 2024, and is something that Google is already working on, announcing in November 2023 that ‘ GNOME’, a new material developmen­t AI tool by its subsidiary Deepmind, had discovered 2.2 million new crystals, including 380,000 stable materials that could power future technologi­es – see SKT highlights AI trends for 2024.

Beyond materials, the NGMN stressed the importance of looking at the energy usage levels of servers, network infrastruc­ture and used equipment and the correspond­ing GHG emissions related to the manufactur­ing and operation of those network elements.

In terms of specific network equipment items, the alliance suggested that extending the lifespan of antennas is “one natural step towards more sustainabl­e networks”. Here, a variety of methods can be considered, including software or hardware reconfigur­ation, choice of sustainabl­e material, modular design, and decoupling of active and passive antennas.

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