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Green Touch Consortium:
1K Fold Improvement ICT Energy Efficiency
January 13, 2010
Green
Touch is a global consortium organized by Bell Labs whose goal is to
create the technologies needed to make communications networks 1000
times more energy efficient than they are today.
Jeong Kim, President, Bell Labs said
“What we are witnessing is a fundamental shift in thinking about ICT
from a focus on optimizing networks for maximum capacity to optimizing
them for energy efficiency. The consortium we are forming serves as a
major milestone along the path toward a future where the potential of
communications networks to meet the demands of their users and benefit
society is inextricably linked to our success in achieving environmental
sustainability by reducing energy consumption.”
A thousand-fold reduction is roughly equivalent to being able to power
the world’s communications networks, including the Internet, for three
years using the same amount of energy that it currently takes to run
them for a single day.
Green Touch brings together leaders in industry, academia and government
labs to invent and deliver radical new approaches to energy efficiency
that will be at the heart of sustainable networks in the decades to
come. With its launch, the consortium also has issued an open invitation
to all members of the Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
community to join forces in reaching this ambitious target.
“Truly
global challenges have always been best addressed by bringing together
the brightest minds in an unconstrained, creative environment. This was
what we used when putting a man on the moon and is the same approach we
need to implement to address the global climate crisis. The Green Touch
initiative is an example of such a response - bringing together
scientists and technologists from around the world and from many
different disciplines in an environment of open innovation to attack the
problem from many different directions,” said Dr. Steven Chu, US
Secretary of Energy.
“The ICT sector is perfectly placed to bring its innovative and
technological forces to bear in the low carbon transition as well as in
curbing its own carbon footprint. The Green Touch Initiative shows how
business can play its part in delivering the low carbon society we are
working to achieve. With Government creating an environment in which
innovation can flourish, we welcome industry coming together with
academia to create the research, technology and solutions necessary to
reduce carbon emissions,” said Ed Miliband, Secretary of State for
Energy and Climate Change, UK.
“Industry has to play a major role in the drive to increasing global
energy efficiency. This is both a matter of environmental responsibility
and competitiveness. We regularly endorse such projects in our “pole de
compétitivité” (competiveness cluster) policy and the Eureka clusters.
This is a particularly crucial area of focus because of increasing usage
of ICT and the Internet. The world-wide Green Touch consortium will open
the way to generating major technological breakthroughs. France supports
this project, which is open to all and in which two major French labs
are founding members,” said Christian Estrosi, Minister for Industry,
France.
“Climate change is an enormous and immediate challenge that needs to be
address globally and with bold actions. It is only through harnessing
the best minds around the world, regardless of their mother companies,
industry, or nationality, that we will make the difference we need to.
The Green Touch consortium, with its open innovation model that
harnesses the leading minds across the globe and includes experts from
every part of ICT, is the model for the sort of radical initiatives that
we need to address the huge challenge of global warming,” said Jong-Soo
Yoon, Director General, Ministry of Environment, South Korea.
“The Portuguese Government has been taking measures to promote the
production of energy by clean technologies. The Green Touch initiative
calls our attention to the importance of the network and collaboration
between different institutions when we face global challenges as
sustainable development. I encourage the participants of this initiative
to bring good solutions to promote the energy efficiency of
communication networks,” said Paulo Campos, Secretary of State for
Public Works and Communications, Portugal.
“Over the next decade billions more people will upload and share video,
images and information over public and private networks as we
communicate with each other in new, rich ways. We also expect ICT usage
to dramatically increase as other industries use networks to reduce
their own carbon footprints. This naturally leads to an exponential
growth in ICT energy consumption which we, as an industry, have to
jointly address. This consortium is unique in looking way beyond making
incremental efficiency improvements and tapping into innovation and
expertise from around the globe to achieve fundamental breakthroughs in
ICT carbon emissions reduction,” Gee Rittenhouse, vice president of
research at Bell Labs and consortium lead.
Green Touch Initiative founding members include:
• Service Providers: AT&T, China Mobile, Portugal Telecom, Swisscom,
Telefonica
• Academic Research Labs: The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s
(MIT) Research Laboratory for Electronics (RLE), Stanford University’s
Wireless Systems Lab (WSL), the University of Melbourne’s Institute for
a Broadband-Enabled Society (IBES)
• Government and Nonprofit Research Institutions: The CEA-LETI Applied
Research Institute for Microelectronics (Grenoble, France), The
Foundation for Mobile Communications (Portugal), imec (Headquarters:
Leuven, Belgium), The French National Institute for Research in Computer
Science and Control (INRIA)
• Industrial Labs: Bell Labs, Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology (SAIT),
Freescale Semiconductor
This 1000-fold efficiency target is based on research from Bell Labs
that determined that today’s information and communication technology (ICT)
networks have the potential to be 10,000 times more efficient than they
are today. This conclusion comes from a Bell Labs’ analysis of the
fundamental properties of ICT networks and technologies (optical,
wireless, electronics, processing, routing, and architecture) and
studying their physical limits by applying established formulas such as
Shannon’s Law.
“With the boom in broadband usage, ICT energy consumption is rapidly
increasing and immediate steps need to be taken to address this trend
and mitigate its impact,” said Vernon Turner, Senior Vice President and
General Manager for Enterprise Computing, Network, Consumer, Telecom and
Sustainability at IDC, a leading industry analyst firm. “What
distinguishes the Green Touch Initiative is its commitment to a hugely
ambitious yet quantifiable goal that is rooted in hard science. Its
global profile and multi-disciplinary approach will accelerate the
necessary fundamental rethinking and development of new technologies.”
To support its objectives the Green Touch Initiative will deliver --
within five years –– a reference network architecture and demonstrations
of the key components required to realize this improvement. This
initiative also offers the potential to generate new technologies and
new areas of industry.
The first meeting of the consortium will take place in February and will
be dedicated to establishing the organization’s five-year plan,
first-year deliverables, and member roles and responsibilities. |