ABI Research Eyes Telco Sustainability Action Items
April 25, 2022
Use
renewable energy for purchased electricity (dramatic CO2 emissions
reduction), replace copper with fiber (85% improved efficiency),
migrate to 5G (up to 90% more efficient than 4G), and retire 3G and
legacy systems (15% energy reduction) are just four of the 30 action
items identified in a new report by global technology intelligence
firm ABI Research. The report, 30 Action Items for Sustainability:
Telco Operators, provides an actionable plan for reaching net-zero
carbon emissions with examples and best practices collected from
across the telecom industry.
For years, the telecommunications sector has demonstrated aggressive
leadership for climate action. In February 2019, the Global System
for Mobile Communications Association (GSMA) Board set an
industry-wide goal to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050 at the
latest. By April 2021, the GSMA reported that mobile operators
covering 50% of global connections and 65% of industry revenue had
committed to science-based targets. “This report seeks to help
telecommunications companies go from sustainability pledges and
targets to next-level execution by identifying the technologies,
platforms, and programs that will take them from good intentions to
robust actions,” explains says Kim Johnson, Sustainable Technologies
Principal Analyst at ABI Research.
ABI Research considers six categories as critical to telco operator
sustainability—renewable energy, network upgrades, energy
efficiency, waste disposal and circular economy, green buildings and
vehicles, and reporting & governance. Within these categories, 30
individual action items have been identified as specific steps that
telco operators can take to reduce their company’s impact on the
environment.
ABI Research has previously published an unbiased Sustainability
Index, ranking ten leading telco operators for sustainability
efforts at the enterprise level. This report expands on that
research and goes deeper into the technologies and applications that
are reducing carbon emissions and waste. Some areas of specific
exploration are: 5G and sustainability, cell-site installations for
renewable energy, specific network equipment recommendations for
energy efficiency, AI-enabled solutions for 5G network optimization,
AI-enabled Power Savings Features (PSFs), and digital twins use
cases for network asset planning, field operations, and customer
mapping.
“With ABI Research’s new sustainability research service, we are
doing more than just identifying sustainable technologies. With each
Action Item in this report, we want to explain the technology or
application, assess its ability to reduce carbon emissions, water,
or waste, and then analyze the costs and benefits expected from
investments in the action or program. Our research and consultative
services are further enhanced by aggregating industry-wide examples
and best practices to fully illustrate use cases and sustainability
outcomes for each action,” Johnson says.
Though
the 30 Action Items mostly address how to reduce a telco operator’s
own emissions, primary research revealed that sustainability leaders
in the industry were not only interested in reducing their own
emissions and waste, but they were also dedicated to working with
suppliers, partners, and customers, upstream and downstream from
their own operations, to reduce overall emissions in the industry.
The European telcos have been especially ambitious in setting aside
differences to form alliances and coalitions that reduce emissions
across common suppliers. For example, in May 2021, Deutsche Telekom,
Orange, Telefónica, Telia Company, and Vodafone launched an
Eco-Rating system for encouraging a wider rating of mobile phones,
while helping to drive demand for more sustainable products.
Eco-Rating currently evaluates more than 200 models of mobile
phones, which is twice the number of devices rated at the launch.
Eco-Rating systems are also challenging a “take, make, and waste”
philosophy of trading smartphones every two years, by encouraging
more sustainable materials, product durability, repairability, and
recyclability.
Finally, global targets for climate change will only be met when
companies engage in actionable plans to reduce carbon emissions.
“There is no silver bullet for a telco operator becoming climate
neutral or reaching net-zero emissions across its value chain. A
series of action items, however, can provide a framework for the
critical steps, such as switching to renewable energy for purchased
electricity, investing in energy efficient network equipment, using
AI-enabled solutions for energy savings, and facilitating
comprehensive sustainability programming that encourages the
responsible management of resources at the company level and across
the industry,” Johnson concludes. |