Companies urged to switch PCs off

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Companies should encourage employees to switch off PCs at night or continue wasting thousands of pounds a year, according to research by Fujitsu Siemens.

In a report released on Monday, the PC maker claimed that £123m is wasted every year in the UK alone powering PCs that could have been shut down or left in hibernation mode. The report also pointed out the environmental impact of all the wasted energy.

Fujitsu Siemens surveyed 1000 employees, and found that some 370 never turned off their computers before leaving the office for the day.

"UK businesses need to consider both the financial and environmental implications of leaving a computer running and make turning off their PCs each night a policy," said Garry Owen, head of product marketing at Fujitsu Siemens Computers, who added that simply putting a computer into standby still means it is consuming power.

Fujitsu Siemens released its report to coincide with the start of 'Energy Saving Week' on Monday.

With energy prices having soared in recent months, plus growing concerns over climate change, the amount of power used by PCs is a hot topic. The European Union recently agreed legislation to cut down on energy wasted by idle computers, including those left in standby.

"Hundreds of thousands of tonnes of carbon dioxide are needlessly produced every year by computers, digital set top boxes, chargers and many other products left on standby mode," said Environment Minister Elliot Morley in June. "We know that products can be designed to be much more efficient and do less harm to the environment. Wasted energy is a hidden cost for consumers and in this day and age that is unacceptable."

There has been confusion in the past about whether it is better to turn PCs off when not in use, or to leave them switched on. Some people have claimed that regularly turning computers off can, over time, weaken links between components and damage hardware such as the hard drive.

According to some estimates, just turning off a monitor can save 75 percent of the overall energy consumption of a PC.

Talkback

Any small business heating installation consumes 1000x more power than a PC.
Any PC left on simply warms the building and saves the boilers doing that small amount of work.
What's really needed is building insulation! ! !

A modern house with modern insulation keeps warm on virtually light bulbs (and PC) alone :-)

via Facebook 24 October, 2005 21:26
Reply

Don't agree with Steve. A sink can be filled by a dripping tap. Pennies make pounds. There is an urgent need to be energy conscious.

In any case, his logic does not consider offices which require air conditioning to take away heat from lights, computers, etc., and is, in any case, highly theoretical.

The temperature in my house does not require to be maintained all night, that's just wasteful.

via Facebook 25 October, 2005 12:26
Reply

The only possible benefit to it is administrators can run updates/virus scans running overnight..

I find computers left on overnight for no reason disgusting. They could at LEAST run SETI@home or another disributed application.

via Facebook 25 October, 2005 16:14
Reply

Is it really so that Elliot Morley so incompetent not understanding that computer cannot produce CO2 if it is not burning or breathing?
May be Environement ministry computers work with alcohol?

via Facebook 5 November, 2005 13:32
Reply

To produce 1 kW of electricity power plant emits 2.5 pounds of CO2. So reducing energy consumption of our PCs is very important.

What we can do right now:
- turn off monitor when not using it,
- turn off PC at night, disconnect it from oullet,
- use programs like CPUIdle (drastically reduces CPU power consumption).

Read detailed article about PC power consumption at WWW.RMI.ORG:
http://www.rmi.org/images/other/Energy/E93-20_EnergyEffComputer.pdf

via Facebook 20 February, 2006 20:27
Reply

Stupid. In winter time it is normal to heat the premices. The hear generated by the computers is to be substracted from the heat system output.

via Facebook 22 February, 2006 17:01
Reply

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