Verizon Targets Energy Conservation Initiatives for Its Networks; Company Products, Including Broadband, Reduce Customer Energy Consumption
Posted on: Wednesday, 4 March 2009, 11:39 CST
Company's Network Energy Conservation Expert Outlines New Standards and Energy-Measurement Guide; Fiber More Efficient Than Copper
In remarks prepared for delivery to the Broadband Forum, a worldwide organization that promotes broadband issues and energy efficiency and conservation in broadband technologies, Graff also said that Verizon's broadband fiber-to-the home and wireless networks have a major role to play in helping businesses and consumers conserve energy.
"Setting and achieving goals and using available technologies are things we all can do," Graff said. "And one of the triggers for great conservation advances will be America's broadband networks and services -- the lifeblood of the forum and its goals. As Americans start to use broadband networks more and more, they save energy, too."
Graff, who last June headed Verizon's innovative mandate that requires all new network equipment to be at least 20 percent more efficient than prior technologies, said the new standards -- coupled with programs that can track consumption and the carbon equivalent impact of new technologies -- will drive Verizon's campaign to improve the efficiency of its networks. This can be achieved even as networked communications burgeon in coming years, he said.
Graff pointed out that reducing the energy consumed by the equipment reduces the heat it generates, creating a complementary reduction in the cost of providing air conditioning in the buildings in which the heat-sensitive equipment is stored.
Graff has established a Web site (www.verizonnebs.com) to support his energy conservation efforts.
Verizon and many of its suppliers are following the guidelines in reviewing new equipment coming online as of
Graff has also begun an analysis of ways Verizon's wireless network, especially its cell sites, can be made more efficient by replacing older equipment -- and in some cases using fuel cell technology, where appropriate -- to power the radio towers that support wireless services.
Verizon was a pioneer in fuel cell use, powering some equipment on Long Island and elsewhere with the new technology. The company also is operating some geothermal heating and cooling facilities to test the value of tapping the earth's constant temperature for warmth or cooling, using heat pump equipment.
Verizon's groundbreaking fiber-to-the-home network is also providing enormous energy savings, Graff said. The fiber-optic equipment in the network itself consumes only 38 percent of the electric power that copper high-speed Internet facilities consume, he said.
The impact of telecommunications technology on customer behaviors has an impact on overall national performance, Graff noted. Broadband networks, for example, can cut America's dependence on foreign oil by 11 percent over the next 10 years as teleworking, teleconferencing, e-commerce and conservation gain in popularity. In addition, the environment will be spared about a billion tons of carbon as a result of broadband's impact on society.
Graff also pointed to United Parcel Service, which has deployed software to determine the most efficient delivery routes for the company's trucks and as a result is saving 28.5 million miles a year, 3 million gallons of gas and is cutting CO2 emissions by 31,000 metric tons.
As consumers modify their behavior to use broadband where they might otherwise have used their cars and consumed gasoline, the impact will grow, Graff said. For example, he said, using online movie services instead of going to the video store, or reading information from a networked device instead of a printed page, are the kinds of behavior changes that will drive conservation.
For the past eight years, Graff has been sharing his enthusiasm and knowledge across the industry via the Network Equipment Building System, or NEBS, conferences at which information and experiences are exchanged among engineers and others. Accounts of the conferences are available at www.verizonnebs.com.
Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ), headquartered in
VERIZON'S ONLINE NEWS CENTER: Verizon news releases, executive speeches and biographies, media contacts, high-quality video and images, and other information are available at Verizon's News Center on the World Wide Web at www.verizon.com/news. To receive news releases by e-mail, visit the News Center and register for customized automatic delivery of Verizon news releases.
SOURCE Verizon
Source: PR Newswire
Related Articles
- iControl Networks Launches Mass Market Energy Management Solution for Broadband Providers and Utilities
- GE Energy to Provide Distribution Management System for EDF Energy Networks in London
- Verizon’s Open Network Device Focuses On Efficiency
- LiveTV Announces Agreement to Purchase Verizon Airfone Network
- BSNL Selects Nokia Siemens Networks to Expand Broadband Access in India
- Verizon Extends Network Services in EMEA and Asia-Pacific
- Verizon Extends Industry Lead in Broadband and Video With G-PON
- Ofgem Plotting UK Energy Network Upgrade
- IDACOMM and Broadband Energy Networks Form Strategic Partnership
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds