Growing Mobile Phone Use Hurts Energy Security, IEA Says
With increased mobile phone and computer use, says the International Energy Agency, comes increased energy use. Unplugging mobile devices once they're charged, and disconnecting a not-in-use charger from the wall, are just two ways to help, according to Nokia.
By 2010 there will be more than 3.5 billion mobile phone
subscribers, 1 billion personal computers and 2 billion televisions in
use around the world, according to the International Energy Agency
(IEA), an energy policy advisor to 28 member countries.
As the numbers of these devices increase, so, too, does the demand for energy.
Presenting a new IEA publication, "Gadgets and Gigawatts" in Paris on
May 13, IEA Executive Director Nobuo Tanaka remarked that "despite
anticipated improvements in the efficiency of electronic devices, these
savings are likely to be overshadowed by the rising demand for
technology in OECD and non-OECD countries."
The OECD, or the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and
Development, was established in 1961 and consists of 30 democratic
member countries that discuss answers to common problems and coordinate
domestic and international policies.
"Without new policies, the energy consumed by information and
communications technologies as well as consumer electronics will double
by 2022 and increase threefold by 2030 to 1,700 Terawatt hours (TWh).
This will jeopardize efforts to increase energy security and reduce the
emission of greenhouse gases," the IEA wrote in a statement on the book
launch.
In "Gadgets and Gigawatts," the IEA reports that electricity
consumption from residential information and communications
technologies, and from consumer electronics, can be cut by more than
half through the use of available technologies and processes.
Nokia, the largest mobile device manufacturer in an industry of more
than 4 billion users, according to Kirsi Sormunen, Nokia's vice
president of environmental affairs, is among the many companies taking
steps toward being an environmental steward - which she said has been
an interest for Nokia since long before green became trendy.
"It's in Nokia's DNA," Sormunen told eWEEK. "And I should know, I've been at Nokia for 28 years myself!"
While companies throughout the supply chain need to do their parts,
Sormunen says there are simple steps end-users can take as well. For
example, unplugging the charger from the wall when it's not in use.
According to data from Nokia, the amount of energy lost when a charger
is plugged in but not connected to a phone is equivalent to two-thirds
of the energy used by a fully charged device.
Another energy-saving tip, particularly for those who tend to charge
their devices overnight, is to unplug the charger and device as soon as
the device is finished charging.
In a market of 4 billion devices, Sormunen says: "There are 1 billion
users using our devices. If just those people would unplug the charger,
it would provide enough energy [to power] 100,000 homes."
Nokia additionally reports that if all 3 billion people using mobile
phones around the world recycled one mobile phone a year - the
presumption being that each of us has an old phone or two in a drawer -
those devices could save 240,000 tons of raw material and reduce
greenhouse gases by an amount equivalent to taking 4 million cars off
the road.
Decreasing the brightness of the phone's screen, turning off Bluetooth
and WLAN capabilities when not in use, and turning off or disabling
sounds on keypads are also ways to increase the energy efficiency of a
mobile device.
The IEA's "Gadgets and Gigawatts," in another environmentally friendly move, is additionally available in a PDF format.









