Dell, HP and IBM Are Among 9 Meeting IDC Green Certification
Dell, HP, IBM and six other companies have met the certifications of a green-focused initiative developed by research company IDC, to set standards in the growing IT asset disposal industry, which is seeing growth as a result of the hurting economy. A Microsoft program has also offered a boost to refurbishers. The certification comes as the tech industry marks Earth Day on April 22.
Dell, Hewlett-Packard and IBM are among nine companies IDC has
recognized as meeting its Green Recycling and Asset Disposal for the
Enterprise-or, G.R.A.D.E-certification. GE Capital, Redemtech, Intechra, Converge, Insight Enterprises and TechTurn complete the list.
The research company recognized that thousands of companies were
involved in various aspects of the collection, treatment and marketing
of retired IT assets, but that the young ITAD (IT asset disposal)
industry needed a set of standards-particularly as enterprises, looking
for third parties to help them phase out old hardware, face government regulations, fear of data breaches and environmental concerns.
IDC decided to launch its own certification process and identified more
than 50 variables-concerning areas of risk, the environment, cost,
operation and outcome-that represent a checklist for best practices and
help enterprises to navigate the ITAD industry.
The current economy has also increased the need for trusted ITAD providers, according to IDC.
"We're looking at an abundance of hardware that has ceased operation since the recession," IDC analyst David Daoud told eWEEK.
"[There are] millions of desktops, laptops, monitors, mobile devices and other hardware that have ceased operating virtually overnight, as a result of the economic downturn," Daoud goes on to explain in a forthcoming research note.
The reality, Daoud writes, is that most enterprises "will continue to
pay license fees for software they don't use, and continue to pay for
storing those systems pending a data security check, until they find a
solution [to retire the systems]. ... [T]hese companies have an
opportunity to control all of that and reduce their costs, if they do
the right things."
When it comes to phasing out old hardware-whether to be refurbished and
resold or dismantled and disposed of-it's generally ideal to turn to a
trusted third party. Rather than waste their IT team's time,
enterprises can have the guarantee of data security, as well as options
to lengthen the life of the product through resale or donations.
A reputable recycler will also keep your name out of the news. "It
would be disastrous PR [public relations] for any company to get caught
sending e-waste to a foreign site," said Daoud.
Large amounts of U.S. e-waste are nonetheless illegally shipped to countries such as India and China, where the results have disastrous consequences for the local people and environments .
Currently, 22 states have passed or are considering e-waste legislation.
"It goes back to the idea that [asset disposal] is a very neglected
area," said Daoud. "It's been a very weak point in IT lifecycle
management."
Robert Hougton, president and CEO of Redemtech, one of IDC's
G.R.A.D.E.-certified companies, says that the economy is also causing
individuals and companies to hold onto their devices longer.
Additionally, he says, "Redeployments are on the rise. Some of our largest corporate clients are buying used equipment from us."
Redemtech has various business models, ranging from safely recycling
hardware for an enterprise, to a consignment model in which it
refurbishes and resells hardware, with the "the lion's share" of the
profits going back to the enterprise.
Redemtech has a proprietary process around securing data. Houghton
explains, however, that data security is more than just erasing hard
drives.
"In our experience, 95 percent of data breaches occur ... when the device
is decommissioned and staged somewhere for its next use," said
Houghton. "It's most vulnerable at that point. From the moment an item
is taken off the network, Redemtech can take control."
Redemtech provides audit reporting to customers as well as
indemnification protection, though, "knock wood," Houghton says, no
one's ever had to use it.
Red Rabbitt is a subsidiary of Redemtech and the label of its
refurbished computer line. Computers are cosmetically restored,
keyboards and other touch points often replaced, stress tests are
performed and the hardware is put into a designed box, "complete with
the Read Me First note," Houghton says.
"Tech users like something clean and shiny and new," says Hougton. "The
idea is that with a used computer, you still give a new computer
experience."
Microsoft has created a MAR (Microsoft Authorized Refurbisher) program,
which enables companies such as Redemtech to install Windows XP Home
for Refurbished PCs and Windows XP Professional for Refurbished PCs
software licenses, which users then register, just like with a new PC.
"To my mind, that's been instrumental to delivering such a high-quality experience," said Houghton.
In Daoud's forthcoming research note, "Checklist for a Compliant and
Cost-Effective Enterprise Hardware Recycling Using IDC G.R.A.D.E.
Certification," asset, risk and operations management of aging hardware
is offered, as well as cost-avoidance measures and advice on achieving
the best ROI and TCO of hardware.
"If you are a manager with some responsibility over lifecycle
management, you should focus on expanding your thinking and processes
beyond the issues of power and energy efficiency, if you have not done
so already," Daoud writes.
Taking the right steps, and championing meaningful changes, he
concludes, can contribute to both cost reductions and environmental
gains.
This
eWEEK slide show features green IT initiatives and products from
G.R.A.D.E.-certified Dell, HP and Redemtech, as well as other
eco-minded manufacturers, such as Nokia, Lenovo and Apple.








