IBM, HP lead the way on green IT

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Oct 17, 20082 mins

Google did not score well in the survey conducted by Gartner and the World Wildlife Fund

Credit: Shutterstock / Troyan

If your IT department has decided to “go green,” you probably need help from your strategic IT vendors. But which ones?

In an attempt to find out, Gartner analyst Simon Mingay, in partnership with the World Wildlife Fund, sent an 82-question survey to 24 vendors worldwide. His goal was to try to determine which vendors were tackling climate change within their own company, as well as which ones were delivering green products and services to their customers.

A number of key vendors declined to participate, including AT&T , Microsoft , Oracle and Sun .

Of those vendors that did respond, IBM stood out in virtually every category, particularly when it came to its internal green initiatives. HP was also high on the list, with good overall performance.

Cisco  could be doing better, Mingay said. “There’s a little bit more talking than doing,” he said. Other companies that fall into the middle ground include Nortel , Dell and Lenovo.

Surprisingly, Google did not score well in the survey. The company has more than 1 million servers and therefore is a huge energy user, but it has no greenhouse gas targets, isn’t very transparent about its green strategy and is not using much in the way of renewable energy, Mingay said. “We expected a higher score,” he said.

Looking at global companies, British Telecom scored the highest of any vendor, while Ericsson and Fujitsu also demonstrated a high level of greenness.

The results of the survey were based on answers provided by the companies, and there was no attempt to verify the information, Mingay cautioned.

Neal Weinberg

Neal Weinberg is an experienced technology journalist with in-depth knowledge of cybersecurity, networking, cloud, wireless, IoT, IT careers, AI, robotics, digital transformation, and self-driving vehicles. Before becoming a freelance writer, he spent 17 years as executive features editor for NetworkWorld. Prior to his time at NetworkWorld, Neal was business editor at Middlesex News. He studied at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. His work has been published in Tech Target, Information Week, Robotics Business Review, and other publications.

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