News
        
        Cisco Making 'Green' a Company Priority 
        
        
        
			- By Stephen Swoyer
 - June 24, 2008
 
		
        If enterprise IT organizations are going to meaningfully reduce their carbon 
  footprints, they're going to do so first by tackling low-hanging fruit -- e.g., 
  power-hungry servers, storage and networking gear.
Cisco Systems Inc. has already made 
  much of its green bona-fides, at least with respect to its IronPort 
  appliance product line. 
This week, Cisco took an even more ambitious step, pledging to reduce its carbon 
  footprint by 25 percent over the next four years. 
"We are innovators at Cisco, and we believe that the best way to achieve 
  a more sustainable impact is to rely on innovation and our technology to help 
  us solve problems," Cisco EcoBoard co-chair Laura Ipsen told Cisco's in-house 
  PR organ, Cisco News. "Our No. 1 goal here is to use less energy -- and we're 
  going to do that by drawing on the power of technology to make things smarter."
In many cases, Cisco plans to rely on its own technology, Rx, to execute on 
  its ambitious greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction schedule. Not that the networking 
  giant won't also take concrete steps to eliminate some of the most glaring sources 
  of GHG emissions. 
For example, officials pointed out, Cisco's labs and datacenters -- which contribute 
  significantly to its overall GHG emissions -- will eventually make use of several 
  energy-saving measures, starting first with a switch to more efficient lab or 
  testing equipment. 
The company also plans to invest in "smart" power distribution units that can 
  actually power down machines when they aren't in use. It will also make aggressive 
  use of virtual network storage and, of course, "greenify" its mechanical 
  and electrical systems. 
Elsewhere, Cisco plans to increase its use of collaborative technologies (such 
  as Cisco TelePresence and Cisco WebEx) to help reduce business travel, which 
  officials say accounts for more than a quarter of its overall GHG footprint. 
  (On that note, Cisco claimed it has already decreased air travel-related emissions 
  by "at least 10 percent per employee.")
Cisco also plans to deploy its Cisco Connected Workspace technology -- which 
  Cisco said helps create a "hybrid" office environment -- at additional sites 
  around the world. At Cisco's San Jose, Calif. headquarters, officials claimed, 
  Cisco Connected Workspace has "significantly" cut back on per-employee electrical 
  demands. 
"Every corporation has a responsibility to help address climate change and 
  to minimize the impact of its operations on the environment," said Cisco 
  CEO John Chambers in a statement. 
Chambers outlined Cisco's ambitious vision at his company's Cisco Live! Confab, 
  held this week in Orlando. 
"Cisco is approaching this challenge not only by curbing our own company's 
  greenhouse gas emissions but also by taking advantage of the power of networking 
  technology to better manage our environmental concerns," he said.     
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Stephen Swoyer is a Nashville, TN-based freelance journalist who writes about technology.