Organizational leaders have absorbed the buzz surrounding green tech. Yet the allure of environmental stewardship alone isn't inspiring the majority of companies adopting greener practices. Rather, those all-important greenbacks -- in the form of lower energy bills, ROI, and tax breaks -- are driving many companies toward more eco-responsible, waste-reducing, sustainable IT initiatives.
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Going green to save green
Nearly 7 in 10 respondents have started down the green road, with 24 percent currently using or pilot-testing green computing
solutions and 45 percent more in the planning stage of at least one initiative. Of the 17 percent who have no plans to implement
a green solution in the next 12 months, 26 percent don't see an ROI in adopting green computing, 15 percent report that it
is not in the budget, and another 15 percent state that their companies' energy costs are not high enough to justify the investment.
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In regard to power bills, few companies, 24 percent, reported that their energy costs have increased over the past 12 months; 60 percent don't anticipate those costs will increase over the next three to five years. Still, as noted above, three-quarters are adopting green IT practices to lower power bills.
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Baby steps
Right now, it looks as if companies are content to nibble at the low-hanging fruit of sustainable IT: the desktop. Currently,
76 percent of respondents are using LCD monitors instead of CRT, while 65 percent recycle hardware; 51 percent turn off computers,
monitors, and printers when not in use; and 50 percent put PCs in sleep mode when not in operation.
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