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Green Information Technology

GIT

The Green Information Technology (GIT) capability is the ability to minimize the environmental impact of IT, and to make the best use of technology to minimize environmental impact across the organization.

Structure

GIT is made up of the following Categories and CBBs. Maturity and Planning are described at both the CC and the CBB level.

AStrategy and Planning

Deals with the strategy and objectives for green information technology.

A1Objectives

Define the green information technology objectives for the IT function.

A2Alignment

Align green information technology objectives between the IT function and the rest of the business.

BProcess Management

Manages approaches to enabling green information technology across the IT life cycle and the business value chain.

B1Operations and Life Cycle

Source/design, operate, and dispose of IT systems in an environmentally sensitive manner.

B2Technology-Enhanced Business Processes

Identify IT solutions that enable environmentally sensitive business operations.

B3Performance and Reporting

Demonstrate progress against objectives for green information technology concerning the IT function or technology-enabled solutions across business operations.

CPeople and Culture

Manages the people and cultural issues associated with the adoption of a green information technology approach.

C1Language

Define, communicate, and use language and vocabulary for green information technology that are understood by all stakeholders.

C2Adoption

Promote principles and behaviours that support green information technology.

DGovernance

Deals with mechanisms to ensure compliance with policies and reporting protocols.

D1Regulatory Compliance

Enable and demonstrate compliance with external standards and regulations concerning the environmental impact of computing and business operation activities.

D2Corporate Policies

Establish corporate policies to support a green information technology strategy.

Overview

Goal

The Green Information Technology (GIT) capability aims to manage IT operations in an environmentally sensitive manner, and to leverage IT to minimize the environmental impact of the wider business activities.

Objectives

An effective Green Information Technology (GIT) capability aims to:

  • Enable the organization to meet its goals of minimizing its environmental impact by:
    • Developing the IT capabilities to minimize the impact of computing activities on the environment — for example, sourcing/designing, operating, and disposing of the computing infrastructure efficiently and effectively with minimal or no impact on the environment.
    • Enabling hi-tech/low-carbon business operations — for example, redesigning business operations using environmentally sensitive IT solutions.
  • Enable the organization to comply with environmental regulations.
  • Enhance its brand reputation by minimizing the organization's environmental impact.
  • Demonstrate leadership in information technology practices that have environmental benefits (planet), social benefits (people), and financial benefits (profit).

Value

The Green Information Technology (GIT) capability enables organizations to minimize their impact on the environment by using IT to deliver Triple Bottom Line (TBL) results — environmental (planet), social (people), and financial (profit).

Relevance

It is estimated that collectively the IT industry accounts for yearly global emissions of 830m tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO₂). This equates to approximately 2 per cent of the total yearly global emission levels and is roughly the same as that produced by the aviation industry1. Furthermore, IT-related emissions are rising five times faster than global CO₂ emission levels2. Therefore, if action isn't taken, IT activities are set to drive global CO₂ emissions even higher. With the introduction of environmental taxes on business activities, offending organizations can expect to face increased carbon tax levies and a negative impact on their public image.

By establishing an effective Green Information Technology (GIT) capability, an organization can reduce the environmental impact of its activities, improve its brand value, and contribute to its bottom line. Typically, such an approach will focus on reducing the power consumed by data centres and other computing equipment; and then moving beyond internal IT infrastructure to where the IT function can enable environmentally sustainable business practices across the entire organization.

Scope

Definition

The Green Information Technology (GIT) capability is the ability to minimize the environmental impact of IT, and to make the best use of technology to minimize environmental impact across the organization.

Improvement Planning

Practices-Outcomes-Metrics (POM)

Representative POMs are described for GIT at each level of maturity.

2Basic
  • Practice
    Develop an initial vision and objectives for green information technology, placing greater emphasis on short-term targets.
    Outcome
    An agreed green information technology vision with clear objectives can help mobilize the organization into action.
    Metric
    Percentage of employees who can describe the objectives.
  • Practice
    Agree targets for the establishment of key roles, policies, and compliance goals to support green information technology.
    Outcome
    Visible targets help mobilize the organization towards fulfilment.
    Metrics
    • Percentage of policies available.
    • Number of roles operationalized.
    • Compliance goals published.
  • Practice
    Agree the green information technology policies in compliance with key regulations and standards.
    Outcome
    Any organizational non-compliance is known and remedial actions can be defined.
    Metrics
    • Number of compliance breaches.
    • Time taken to remedy compliance breaches.
  • Practice
    Promote a common language/vocabulary for discussing the impact of green information technology activities and how to measure it.
    Outcome
    Stakeholders share a common understanding of what green information technology means for the organization.
    Metric
    Percentage of green information technology activities with defined outcomes using the approved organizational language/vocabulary — for example preferred or agreed metrics.
  • Practice
    Assess the environmental impact of IT infrastructure and services at different stages of the life cycle — for example, production, transportation, use, maintenance, and disposal.
    Outcome
    Quantifying the environmental impact of IT activities can widen stakeholder buy-in to the green information technology strategy.
    Metrics
    • Percentage reduction in the IT function's carbon footprint.
    • Percentage reduction in the use of hazardous materials/components.
3Intermediate
  • Practice
    Ensure that the strategy for green information technology is applied to a prioritized list of projects and activities.
    Outcome
    The organization's sustainability agenda and activities have greater influence across the organization.
    Metrics
    • Percentage improvement in the IT function's carbon footprint.
    • Percentage improvement in the overall organization's carbon footprint.
  • Practice
    Provide employee incentives to improve awareness of green information technology and encourage use in business operations.
    Outcome
    Awareness and acceptable behaviours grow among individual employees.
    Metrics
    • Percentage of employees with green information technology and business operations targets.
    • Number of communications showcasing model employee behaviours.
  • Practice
    Mandate environmental sustainability policies across the IT asset life cycles, IT operations, and processes.
    Outcome
    The environmental impact of IT activities becomes a formal mandate across the IT function.
    Metrics
    • Percentage reduction in the IT function's carbon footprint.
    • Percentage reduction in the use of hazardous materials.
  • Practice
    Benchmark the outcomes from green information technology initiatives.
    Outcome
    The improved environmental sustainability performance of the entire organization is known, and this can lead to the wider promotion and take-up of better practices.
    Metric
    Number of practices shared across business domains.
  • Practice
    Encourage all suppliers (current or prospective) to provide details of their green information technology practices.
    Outcome
    A more sustainable IT procurement process is encouraged.
    Metric
    Percentage of suppliers who provide sustainability reports.
4Advanced
  • Practice
    Conduct joint reviews with other business units to evaluate the performance of green information technology initiatives.
    Outcome
    The green information technology performance of the entire organization is known, and any performance gaps in it are clear.
    Metric
    Percentage of business units' environmental sustainability targets achieved.
  • Practice
    Jointly review green information technology objectives across the whole organization.
    Outcome
    There is a single forum for discussing green information technology initiatives.
    Metric
    Number of joint business unit initiatives involving green information technology enablement.
  • Practice
    Leverage the success of green information technology initiatives in corporate communications — for example, by communicating sustainability performance and progress to stakeholders.
    Outcome
    Employees, customers, and partners better appreciate the organization's endeavours regarding green information technology.
    Metrics
    • Number of industry awards received for green information technology.
    • Number of times the organization is mentioned externally — for example in media outlets — for its green information technology credentials.
5Optimized
  • Practice
    Continually promote the green information technology strategy at the executive board level.
    Outcome
    The organization maintains its focus on achieving its environmental objectives.
    Metric
    Percentage reduction in carbon footprint across the organization.
  • Practice
    Advocate green information technology throughout the extended value chain.
    Outcome
    The impact on the triple bottom line (people, planet, profit) can be amplified by leveraging relevant business ecosystem partners.
    Metrics
    • Percentage reduction in carbon footprint across the organization.
    • Percentage reduction in carbon footprint across the value chain.
  • Practice
    Maintain a continual engagement with standards and regulation setting bodies.
    Outcome
    The IT function has an insight into evolving trends and can influence future compliance, government programmes, and industry targets.
    Metric
    Number of active engagements with industry, regulation, and standards bodies.

Reference

History

This capability was introduced in Revision 16 as a new critical capability.