Pressure grows for IT to be included in Copenhagen agreement
Cisco and Ericsson chief executives are understood to be keen, as well as UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon
The international body that regulates telecommunications has succeeded in getting mention of IT into the draft climate agreement to be negotiated at Copenhagen next month.
The International Telecommunications Union (ITU) says the move is vital to getting the IT sector included in the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) or any successor to it.
The CDM allows government and businesses in the developed world to receive carbon credits for investing in certain types of carbon-reduction projects in the developing world.
But currently IT companies that want to invest in carbon-reduction projects in developing countries won't receive credits.
This has to change, according to Malcolm Johnson, director of the ITU's standardisation bureau.
"This is a way of bridging the digital divide and tackling climate change. It's a win-win situation," he said.
Awarding CDM credits for IT projects would encourage ICTs to develop smart grids, intelligent transport systems and high-speed broadband in developing countries – all of which reduce emissions.
The ITU argues that awarding credits for certain projects will encourage ICT companies to focus more on sustainability.
For example, instead of simply replacing mobile phone masts that provide the telecoms infrastructure in African countries, firms would receive carbon credits if they installed replacement masts powered by renewables.
Cisco chief executive John Chambers and Ericsson chief executive Carl-Henric Svanberg are understood to be pressing the US and Danish governments respectively to get ICTs mentioned more widely in the Copenhagen agreement.
Johnson says the ITU has written to all governments attending Copenhagen and asked them to press for further inclusion. The ITU will also have a delegation at the conference.
The move is also understood to have the support of Ban Ki-moon, secretary general of the UN, who is likely to mention the importance of ICTs in reducing emissions in his opening speech at Copenhagen.
But the ITU still fears that the subject of ICTs will be dropped in the frantic trading that goes on during negotiations.
A report from the Climate Group found that ICTs have the potential to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by 15 per cent by 2020.
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