Green4Good: Stopping Climate Change One Computer at a Time

Community Rating

7
Rating: 
7

What it Does

Green4Good achieves environmental and social benefits by secure refurbishment and re-use of IT assets (desktops and notebooks) that would traditionally have gone to long-term storage or been recycled while raising money for charities through the proceeds of the asset resale.

Environmental Benefits

Contestant organization: 
Compugen Finance, Inc.
Venture partners: 

Green4Good is designed and managed by Compugen Finance Inc. and supported by Earth Rangers, and other Canadian organizations that focus on environmental impacts of human activities.

Describe your venture: 

What it Does

Green4Good achieves environmental and social benefits by secure refurbishment and re-use of IT assets (desktops and notebooks) that would traditionally have gone to long-term storage or been recycled while raising money for charities through the proceeds of the asset resale.

Environmental Benefits

The environmental benefits are related to deferral of manufacturing of new equipment (the productive life of the asset may be extended by years in the hands of end-users with no need to purchase new equipment every two to three years). Manufacturing of new computers has huge environmental costs.

Technology and Social Ecosystem

Who needs to dispose of these assets? Canadian enterprises that manage hundreds or thousands of desktop or notebook computers. As a rule these enterprises apply refresh cycles for their equipment that correspond to their asset depreciation schedules as well as addressing their need for consistency in hardware profiles—its more efficient to manage and maintain a large class of identical assets than it is to manage a very heterogeneous environment. Once the assets are due for a refresh, they need to be removed from circulation and, until Green4Good, were often warehoused as a way of keeping any private data they contained out of the wrong hands and avoiding the unreliable grey market in used IT equipment.

With Green4Good, secure, efficient asset refurbishment and ultimate resale has become the preferred method of passing these decommissioned assets out of the enterprise environment, safely into the ISO-certified configuration environment of Compugen where they are wiped, cleaned, given legal, licensed operating systems, and warranted, mostly for consumer end-users. Only about 10 percent of assets are found to be irreparable and only these are destined for environmentally responsible recycling. Equipment never goes to landfill.

Thus Green4Good serves both the market for responsible end-of-life asset disposal and the environmental concerns of a growing number of non-profits, charities and Canadian for-profit businesses. For example, Green4Good has major sponsorship from Hewlett-Packard Canada and Sims Recycling, and strategic partnership with World Wildlife Fund, Friends of the Earth , Earth Rangers  and Air Miles, which are all Advocates of Green4Good.

The benefits are local and global, in terms of the climate change impact from reduced GHG emissions and the opportunities afforded businesses to donate the proceeds to a charity of their choice.

Emissions reduction potential: 

Addressing Climate Change

According to a 2003 UN study (pdf), the manufacture of one desktop computer requires 22 Kg of chemicals, 1.5 tonnes of water, and 240 Kg of fossil fuels—about 10 times the weight of the computer itself. (In contrast, new refrigerators and cars require approximately their own weight in fossil fuels.) Further, by one estimate, four fifths of the energy consumed by a computer over its lifetime is associated with its manufacture. Extending the life of a computer, thereby deferring the manufacture of a new one, is good environmental stewardship.

Green4Good is promoting re-use, not recycle.

Since inception, Green4Good has directed about 135,000 computers into reuse that were mostly destined for recycling. A conservative estimate of fossil fuel reduction achieved would be 2,400,000 Kg (or 2400 tonnes), resulting in signficant reduction in GHG emissions.

Assuming gasoline as a fossil fuel, the 2400 tonnes of fossil fuel associated with the manufacture of, for example, 100,000 PCs equates to 17,688,000 litres of gasoline (.737 Kg / Litre), which produces by the calculator provided at www.toronto.ca/taf/quant_policy_approach.htm 2.3 x 17 688 000 Kg of CO2 = 40 682 400 Kg. Other fuels would produce worse or better results, and different assumptions would yield varying reductions of CO2. However, the net reduction in CO2 emissions from this initiative must be very substantial, in the millions of Kilograms.

While Toronto is not a centre of PC or PC-component manufacturing, we recognize that the impacts of CO2 on climate change are global and not local. A sustained reduction of CO2 emissions in China or Japan, for example, is as important to climate change as it would be if it took place in Etobicoke or Scarborough.

The team: 

Business Sustainability Model

As described in response to Question 1, above, the program is sustainable and highly successful because it matches environmental and social goals of for-profit donors with needs and aspirations of non-profits. Its greatest exponents are drawn from both sides of this equation.

Through its network of sponsors, advocates and beneficiaries (both for-profit and non-profit), Green4Good is serving to evangelize for green-house-gas emission reductions, and show donors how to make substantial contributions to charities they target for support, be they women’s shelters, educational concerns, international development projects or local initiatives. Charities and projects benefiting have included: Megan’s Walk; Mexican School (CNRL); Outreach Zanzibar; Project Childcare; RCMP Foundation; Reach for the Rainbow; Sick Kids; Bereaved Families of Ontario; Building Bridges; Unison Community Services; Angel Foundation for Learning; Bowmanville Valley Co-Op; CCFAA; Compugen Kids; Earth Rangers; Friends of the Earth; Homeward Bound; Impact Ministries; Massey Centre; Maya Fund. The opportunities are vast as the charities are targeted completely at the discretion of the donors.

Through these same sponsors, advocates and beneficiaries, Green4Good has gained significant presence in the Canadian marketplace. Here are some of the ways in which the program has gained recognition and support:

Additional coverage continues through web-based and email campaigns such as:

Why is Green4Good in the Right Hands?

Compugen Inc. through its complete enterprise-level IT lifecycle services, and Compugen Finance, through its IT leasing and recycling capabilities, both have strong relationships with large Canadian enterprises that are good stewards of their IT assets, so that when these assets come up for renewal they have significant residual value. Traditionally, large enterprises have been concerned with security and privacy, so have not been willing to part with decommissioned assets, but have preferred to store them securely so no private data could ever inadvertently be shared. The costs of storage, while high, were considered less than the cost of privacy breaches or the cost of secure wiping and disposal. Compugen, with 30 years’ experience in the IT business, has audited processes and procedures, and efficiencies in its operations that permit a high level of confidence and major cost savings over other methods of asset disposition. Enterprises thus see a double win in assigning these decommissioned assets to a refurbishment stream through CFI, as the assets have substantial residual value in the context of this Compugen-engineered Green4Good program. Ninety percent of the assets entering the stream are able to be refurbished, rather than recycled. Refurbished assets, properly re-licenced and guaranteed, are typically resold through the consumer market at a significant discount from the price of new equipment.

Compugen was Canada’s first Microsoft Authorized Refurbisher, giving it access to standard Microsoft operating system licenses at reduced cost to the purchaser. Since the value of such depreciated assets cannot show up on the corporate balance sheet, it can be directed to a charity of choice as cash or credits toward acquisition of newer more efficient IT equipment. And, the reduced carbon footprint associated with deferred computer manufacturing—a computer kept in operation is a new computer not built—is of particular interest to Compugen’s partners in the non-profit and charitable sectors with a focus on GHG and its negative impact on climate stability. We all benefit when businesses can find ways, such as through Green4Good, to reduce the environmental impact of their operations, and benefit a number of other social concerns through direct donation of cash or credits to acquire modern, more efficient assets, that they would otherwise acquire anyway but at a higher cost.

Our Local Team

 

Seeking collaborators: 
No
Potential collaborators should contact : 
Steve Glover, Senior VP, Compugen Finance, [email protected]
How will you ensure your project is self supporting within five years?: 

The project is currently self-supporting, and the climate change benefits can only increase with greater refurbishment uptake by local, regional and national businesses looking both for positive environmental impact and responsible ways of disposing of their retired computer equipment, with a charitable twist!

How did you hear about ClimateSpark?: 
We heard about ClimateSpark from our friends at BetterTheWorld.ca

Comments

chris winter's picture

Andy Rooney said on 60 Minutes that he had one typewriter for 50 years and has bought seven computers in six years.  Anything we can do to counter the premature junking of computers would be a good thing.

We have a computer doctor (best term I can come up with) who visits, or can remotely access and check our computer, and make any adjustments.  He recently ran into a problem that he couldn't fix, and so we had to upgrade.  But he took our old computer and gave it to a small law firm that needed a computer for word processing only.  Now that is a good green advisor!

This project clearly has benefits at many levels.

How could this proposal be improved?: 

What ever happened to Reboot?  There's a case study to look at, cause they were doing a similar venture.  I see they are still around.  Are they a similar venture, or is there a difference?

What is the size of the market for inputs? Is this sustainable? What's the outreach strategy for consumers vs. corporate refurbs?

Rich Whate's picture

I've heard this done before but haven't seen any one organization stick with this long enough to make it resonate when people and companies are replacing computers.  Hope this one has a strong promotional plan and some early adopters to make it stick.

How could this proposal be improved?: 

I think more collaborators could give this a better chance of long-term success. 

Lon's picture

how does this compare to http://www.techsoupcanada.ca/product ?  could you partner with them?

The proposal is based upon a good idea but I amnot totally convinced about it. Needs to work upon minute but crucial details.

How could this proposal be improved?: 

The proposal needs to be worked upon. A lot is required to be thought of. Though a great initiative but execution is equally important. Proper planning has to be there.

People are consuming more than they wants, I mean if we look at our selves we have at least four to five electronic items in our bag or pokect every time and we updata it almost every year or two years. If its a senario with everyone than dumping ground will fill up with our It scrap only. 

recycleing is the best way to reduse the scrap and also recycleing saves lots of energy so it is helpful in both ways 

How could this proposal be improved?: 

This proposal can be improved by involving more young people in the project because they are the only major consumer of It products

The article is a veryu good one if its a small scale industry, but if it is a multinational company it is very difficult to implement this idea as it will be overloaded and not safe to keep important data as if it ets corrupted then there is no other alternative to find the source of data again

How could this proposal be improved?: 

This proposal is a good one and with minor improvements like 1 computer between a group of people say 5 - 7 might be useful as it will save not much but atleast beneficial for both Society and the Company

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