Global Benchmark Report from Fujitsu
ICT Sustainability: Global Benchmark Report from
Fujitsu reveals a lack of visibility of the ICT energy bill
has slowed the impetus of Sustainability
initiatives
The failure to measure direct ICT power consumption has taken the impetus from sustainability initiatives
Sydney, 20 September 2011 - Fujitsu, a
leading provider of ICT business solutions, today released
the second ICT Sustainability: The Global Benchmark Report The research summarises 1,000 responses to 80
questions about ICT Sustainability policies, behaviour and
technologies. The data was collected through an online
survey of CIOs and ICT managers in large IT-using
organisations across industry sectors in seven countries:
Australia, Canada, China, India, New Zealand, The United
Kingdom (UK) and the United States of America
(USA). This is the second Benchmark Report and from
this year's findings there is a continuing relative lack of
maturity in ICT Sustainability. It is also clear there is a
direct relationship between the visibility of ICT power
costs and an organisation's overall awareness of ICT
Sustainability issues.
The Index across all countries
and all industry sectors declined slightly between 2010 and
the current results (from 56.4 to 54.3 per cent), which
indicates that organisations may be losing their focus on
ICT energy efficiency and ICT projects that were implemented
have failed to institutionalise changes across the
organisation. More than half the respondents had no
understanding of how much power ICT consumes, with only one
in seven ICT divisions including the cost of ICT's power
consumption in their departmental budgets. For the very
small proportion (14.2 per cent) where ICT has control and
responsibility for ICT-specific power consumption, their
performance was significantly higher. Larger
organisations which have more sophisticated ICT functions
and generally more advanced ICT Sustainability practices are
more likely to be aware of the cost of ICT's energy
consumption. Organisations with more than 5,000 employees
have an average score of 61.7 compared with just 50.7 for
those with 100 to 499 employees. With the results of
this second multi-country survey, Alison Rowe, Fujitsu's
Global Executive Director Sustainability, said: "Not only is
there a relative lack of maturity in ICT Sustainability
policies, practices and technologies but the overall Index
has declined slightly from 2010, indicating that some of the
buzz has gone from Green ICT. "Many organisations have
reached a plateau with ICT Sustainability. They may have
tackled the easy initiatives, such as PC power management or
telecommuting, but the problem is that even these have
declined in performance. "The survey reveals that the
single most important reason ICT departments don't
prioritise ICT Sustainability, or feel they have a
compelling reason to do so, is the lack of visibility of ICT
power consumption. Until this data can be quantified, change
cannot be measured and successes cannot be
recognised. "ICT is pervasive in business and extends
far beyond the data centre or the ICT department. ICT
Sustainability is the responsibility of all of us, be it end
users, lines of business, the procurement function, senior
management or our customers, we all have a role to play.
This Benchmarking Report provides powerful information which
can be leveraged for positive change," Rowe said. Best
Performing Country The best performing country of the
seven surveyed is Canada, with an overall ICT Sustainability
Index of 60.3. Canada, the UK 58.3 and the USA 56.0 perform
above average, while Australia, New Zealand, India and China
perform below the average. Best Performing Sector The
ICT/Communications/Media sector is the lead industry at 58.4
and Manufacturing the lowest at 51.2, except in Canada. As
with the findings of the 2010 survey, the relativities
between industry sectors are generally consistent across
different countries; the same industries tend to do better
or worse in all countries. Approach to Lifecycle
Matures The Lifecycle component performs the best at 60.6,
as it had in the previous Benchmark Report, with most
organisations being relatively mature when it comes to
practices in this area, particularly in the disposal of
consumables and IT equipment. Lifecycle is followed by the
two operational components under the control of the ICT
department, End User at 57.3 and Enterprise at 56.8, where
the techniques and technologies of ICT Sustainability are
best understood and most
advanced. Australia Australia's ICT Sustainability
performance ranks below Canada, the UK and the USA and
slightly ahead of New Zealand, India and China. Its overall
rating of 52.8 is just below the international
average. Australia was one of the four countries also
surveyed in 2010, when its Index was 53.9. Its marginal
decline this year indicates that ICT Sustainability in
Australia has lost momentum. Australia's performance in the
End User Index component is of particular concern as this is
where many quick wins can be found Chris Seale,
Director Sustainability for Australia and New Zealand, said:
"Australia's significant decline in the End User category,
from 62.3 to 51.8, indicates that many local ICT operations
may be suffering from 'green fatigue' or initiatives have
failed to become institutionalised. This is further
supported by Australia's very low visibility of ICT power
consumption where less than one per cent of ICT departments
are responsible for the cost of ICT's power
consumption." The breakdown by industry sector in
Australia is similar to that in other countries: there are
no industry sectors where Australia performs significantly
better or worse than the international average for that
industry. The Australian ICT/Communications/Media industry
sector performs the best overall, with the Lifecycle
component in Professional Services at 65.1 scoring highly.
As in 2010, Manufacturing is lowest placed and Metrics in
Manufacturing at 39.4 the lowest score overall. New
Zealand New Zealand's overall ICT Sustainability
performance of 51.9 is below the international average. It
is equal to the international average in Enablement, and
marginally behind in other areas. New Zealand
organisations with 500-999 employees rate the highest (61.9)
of any organisation group in any country. In New Zealand
there is no correlation between size and ICT Sustainability
performance. This differs from the other six countries
surveyed where larger organisations perform better. By
industry sector New Zealand is close to the international
averages. It is substantially ahead in
Utilities/Construction/Mining, particularly in the
Enablement component at 70.1, and substantially behind in
Wholesale/Retail/Logistics where the lowest score of all
industries and components is Metrics at 27.6. New Zealand
performs well in the Government sector, where ICT
Sustainability policies and implementation are relatively
advanced. Chris Seale, Director Sustainability for
Australia and New Zealand, said: "Participation in the
research has been an unprecedented opportunity for local
industries to be involved in a comprehensive global study
and, subsequently, to have access to benchmarking statistics
that provide applicable information for strategic planning.
The Report provides a baseline from which to change planning
and procurement as well as corporate-wide
behaviours." The report is downloadable from here. About
the ICT Sustainability: The Global Benchmark Report
Survey Sponsored by Fujitsu, this Report provides a number
of valuable insights into the comparative ICT Sustainability
performance of organisations in each of the seven countries
surveyed, and between industry sectors within
countries. The research uses a unique methodology to
quantify ICT Sustainability implementation, to determine the
maturity of practices and technologies in end user
organisations. It summarises a total of 1,000 responses to
80 questions covering ICT Sustainability policies, behaviour
and technologies collected in June and July 2011 through an
online survey of CIOs and ICT Managers in large IT-using
organisations. The responses were weighted to deliver a
score out of 100 in each of the five ICT Sustainability
Index components, aggregated to determine the overall ICT
Sustainability Index for each organisation, ensuring
quantitative comparisons between respondents. The 2010
Report surveyed Australia, India, the United Kingdom and the
United States of America. The 2011 survey extended the
research to Canada, China and New Zealand. About
Connection Research - www.connectionresearch.com.au Connection
Research is a market research and consultancy company
specialising in the analysis of sustainability issues.
Services are provided in Consumer and Community
Sustainability, Green IT, Building Industry and Trades and
Carbon and Compliance. Connection Research undertakes
primary research (surveys of users, trades people,
suppliers, practitioners), conducts market modelling
analyses (combining our primary data with other sources) and
consultancy in these fields. About the
methodology The research uses the methodology developed by
Connection Research and RMIT University, Melbourne,
Australia. The results allow the development of an overall
Green IT Readiness Index for IT-using organisations in any
industry or country. About Fujitsu Fujitsu is a
leading provider of information and communication technology
(ICT)-based business solutions for the global marketplace.
With approximately 170,000 employees supporting customers in
over 100 countries, Fujitsu combines a worldwide corps of
systems and services experts with highly reliable computing
and communications products and advanced microelectronics to
deliver added value to customers. Headquartered in Tokyo,
Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported consolidated revenues of
4.5 trillion yen (US$55 billion) for the fiscal year ended
March 31, 2011. For more information, please see: www.fujitsu.com About
Fujitsu Australia and New Zealand Fujitsu Australia and
New Zealand is a leading service provider of business,
information technology and communications solutions. As the
third largest ICT Company in the Australian and New Zealand
marketplace, we partner with our customers to consult,
design, build, operate and support business solutions. From
strategic consulting to application and infrastructure
solutions and services, Fujitsu Australia and New Zealand
has earned a reputation as the single supplier of choice for
leading corporate and government organisations. Fujitsu
Australia Limited and Fujitsu New Zealand Limited are wholly
owned subsidiaries of Fujitsu Limited (TSE: 6702). www.fujitsu.com.au ENDS