The role of
telecommunications/ICTs
on climate change and the protection of the
environment
The Plenipotentiary Conference of the
International Telecommunication Union
(Guadalajara, 2010),
recognizing
- Resolution 136 (Antalya,
2006) of the Plenipotentiary
Conference on the use of
telecommunications and
information and
communication technologies
(ICTs) for monitoring and
management in emergency and
disaster situations for
early warning, prevention,
mitigation and relief;
- relevant resolutions of
World Radiocommunication
Conferences and
Radiocommunication
Assemblies, such as
Resolution 646 (WRC-03), on
public protection and
disaster relief; Resolution
644 (Rev. WRC-07), on
radiocommunication resources
for early warning, disaster
mitigation and relief
operation or Resolution 673
(WRC-07), on the use of
radiocommunication for Earth
observation in collaboration
with the World
Meteorological Organization
(WMO);
- Resolution 73
(Johannesburg, 2008) of the
World Telecommunication
Standardization Assembly, on
ICTs and climate change,
which resulted from the
successful work of the focus
group created in 2007 by the
Telecommunication
Standardization Advisory
Group to identify the role
of the ITU Telecommunication
Standardization Sector
(ITU‑T) in regard to this
issue and was adopted in
response to the needs
identified in the relevant
contributions to WTSA-08 by
the ITU regional groups;
- Resolution 66 (Rev.
Hyderabad, 2010) of the
World Telecommunication
Development Conference
(WTDC) on ICT applications
and climate change;
- Resolution 54 (Rev.
Hyderabad, 2010) of WTDC on
ICT;
- Resolution 1307 adopted
by the ITU Council at its
2009 session on ICTs and
climate change;
further recognizing
- §20 of Action Line C7
(e-environment) of the
Geneva Plan of Action of the
World Summit on the
Information Society (Geneva,
2003), calling for the
establishment of monitoring
systems using ICTs to
forecast and monitor the
impact of natural and
man-made disasters,
particularly in developing
countries;
- Opinion 3 of the 2009
World Telecommunication
Policy Forum (ICT and the
environment), which
recognizes that
telecommunications/ICTs can
make a substantial
contribution to mitigating
and adapting to the effects
of climate change and calls
for formulating future
inventions and efforts for
effectively addressing it;
- the outcomes of the UN
Climate Change Conferences
held in Indonesia in
December 2007 and in
Copenhagen in December 2009;
- the Nairobi Declaration
on the Environmentally Sound
Management of Electrical and
Electronic Waste, and the
adoption by the Ninth
Conference of the Parties to
the Basel Convention of the
Work Plan for the
Environmentally Sound
Management of E-waste,
focusing on the needs of
developing countries and
countries with economies in
transition,
considering
- that the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC)
estimated that global
greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions had risen by more
than 70 per cent since 1970,
having an effect on global
warming, changing weather
patterns, rising sea-levels,
desertification, shrinking
ice cover and other
long-term effects;
- that climate change is
acknowledged as a potential
threat to all countries and
needs a global response;
- that the consequences of
developing countries' lack
of preparation in the past
have recently come to light,
and that these countries
will be exposed to
incalculable dangers and
considerable losses,
including the consequences
of rising sea levels for
many coastal areas in
developing countries;
- Programme 5 of the
Hyderabad Action Plan for
least developed countries,
countries in special need
(small island developing
states, low-lying coastal
countries and landlocked
developing countries),
emergency telecommunications
and climate change
adaptation,
further considering
- that
telecommunications/ICTs play
an important role in
protecting the environment
and in promoting innovative
and sustainable development
activities at low risk to
the environment;
- that the role of
telecommunications/ICTs in
tackling the challenge of
climate change encompasses a
wide array of activities,
including, but not limited
to: the promotion of
telecommunications/ICTs as
alternatives to other
technologies that consume
more energy; the development
of energy-efficient devices,
applications and networks;
the development of
energy-efficient working
methods; the implementation
of satellite and
ground-based remote sensing
platforms for environmental
observation, including
weather monitoring; and the
use of
telecommunications/ICTs to
warn the public of dangerous
weather events and provide
communication support for
governmental and
non-governmental
organization aid providers
to contribute to the
reduction of GHG emissions;
- that remote sensing
applications on board
satellites and other
radiocommunication systems
are important tools for
climate monitoring,
environmental observation,
disaster prediction,
detection of illegal
deforestation, and the
detection and mitigation of
the negative effects of
climate change;
- the role ITU can play in
promoting the use of ICTs to
mitigate climate change
effects, and that the
Strategic Plan for the Union
for 2012-2015 gives clear
priority to combating
climate change using ICTs;
- that the use of
telecommunications/ICTs
provides increased
opportunities to reduce GHG
emissions generated by
non-ICT sectors through the
utilization of
telecommunications/ICTs in
ways that replace services
or increase efficiency of
the sectors concerned,
aware
- that
telecommunications/ICTs also
contribute to emissions of
GHG, a contribution which,
although relatively small,
will grow with the increased
use of
telecommunications/ICTs, and
that the necessary priority
must be given to reducing
GHG emissions;
- that developing
countries face additional
challenges in addressing the
effects of climate change,
including natural disasters
related to climate change,
bearing in mind
- that countries have ratified the United Nations
Framework Convention on
Climate Change Protocol and
have committed to reduce
their emission levels of GHG
to targets that are mainly
set below their 1990 levels;
- that the countries that
have submitted plans in
response to the Copenhagen
Accord have specified which
steps they are prepared to
take to reduce their carbon
intensity in the current
decade,
noting
- that the current ITU-T
Study Group 5 is the lead
ITU-T study group
responsible for studies on
methodologies for evaluating
telecommunication/ICT
effects on climate change,
for publishing guidelines
for using ICTs in an
eco-friendly way, for
studying energy efficiency
of the power feeding
systems, for studying ICT
environmental aspects of
electromagnetic phenomena,
and for studying, assessing
and analysing safe, low-cost
social recirculation of
telecommunication/ICT
equipment through recycling
and reuse;
- ITU-D Study Group 2
Question 24/2 on ICTs and
climate change, adopted by
the WTDC (Hyderabad, 2010);
- that ITU Recommendations
that focus on energy-saving
systems and applications can
play a critical role in the
development of
telecommunications/ICTs, by
promoting the adoption of
recommendations for
enhancing the use of
telecommunications/ICTs to
serve as an effective
cross-cutting tool to
measure and reduce GHG
emissions across economic
and social activities;
- the leadership of ITU-R,
in collaboration with the
ITU membership, in
continuing to support
studies on the use of
radiocommunication systems,
including remote sensing
applications, to improve
climate monitoring and
disaster prediction,
detection and relief;
- that there are other
international bodies that
are working on climate
change issues, including the
United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate
Change, and that ITU should
collaborate, within its
mandate, with those
entities;
- that several countries
have committed to a 20 per
cent reduction in GHG
emissions both in the ICT
sector and in the use of
ICTs in other sectors by
2020, against 1990 levels,
resolves
that ITU within its mandate and in
collaboration with other organizations, will
demonstrate its leadership in applying
telecommunications/ICTs to address the
causes and effects of climate change through
the following:
- to continue and further
develop ITU activities on
telecommunications/ICTs and
climate change in order to
contribute to the wider
global efforts being made by
the United Nations;
- to encourage energy
efficiency of
telecommunications/ICTs in
order to reduce the GHG
emissions produced by the
telecommunication/ICT
sector;
- to encourage the
telecommunication/ICT sector
to contributes through its
own improvement of energy
efficiency and in the use of
ICTs in other parts of the
economy, to an annual
reduction in GHG emissions;
- to report on the level
that the ICT sector has
contributed to the reduction
of GHG emissions in other
sectors through a reduction
of their energy consumption
by applying ICTs;
- to promote awareness of
the environmental issues
associated with
telecommunication/ICT
equipment, design and
encourage energy efficiency
and the use of materials in
the design and fabrication
of telecommunication/ICT
equipment in order to
promote a clean and safe
environment;
- to include, as a
priority, assistance to
developing countries so as
to strengthen their human
and institutional capacity
in promoting the use of
telecommunications/ICTs to
tackle climate change, as
well as in areas such as the
need for communities to
adapt to climate change, as
a key element of disaster
management planning,
instructs the Secretary-General, in
collaboration with the Directors of the
three aux
- to formulate a plan of
action for the role of ITU,
taking into account all
relevant ITU resolutions, in
conjunction with other
relevant expert
bodies/groups, and taking
into account the specific
mandate of the three ITU
Sectors;
- to ensure that the
relevant ITU study groups
responsible for ICTs and
climate change implement the
plan of action referred in
instructs the
Secretary-General 1 above;
- to liaise with other
relevant organizations in
order to avoid duplication
of work and optimize the use
of resources;
- to ensure that ITU
organizes workshops,
seminars and training
courses in developing
countries at the regional
level for the purpose of
raising awareness and
identifying key issues in
order to generate best
practice guidelines;
- to continue taking
appropriate measures within
the Union to contribute to
the reduction of carbon
footprint (e.g. paperless
meetings, videoconferences,
etc.);
- to report annually
to the Council and to the
next plenipotentiary
conference on the progress
made by ITU on
implementation of this
resolution;
- to submit this
resolution and other
appropriate outcomes of the
ITU activities to meetings
of relevant organizations,
including the UNFCCC, in
order to reiterate the
Union's commitment to
sustainable global growth;
and to ensure recognition of
the importance of
telecommunications/ICTs in
mitigation and adaptation
efforts as well as the
critical role of ITU in this
regard,
instructs the Directors of the three
Bureaux, within the purview of their mandate
- to continue the
development of best
practices and guidelines
that will assist governments
in the development of policy
measures that could be used
to support the ICT sector in
reducing GHG emissions and
promoting ICTs in other
sectors;
- to help in the promotion
of research and development:
- to
improve the
energy
efficiency
of ICT
equipment
- to
measure
climate
change
- to
mitigate the
effects of
climate
change
- to adapt
to the
effects of
climate
change,
instructs the Director of the
Telecommunication Standardization Bureau
- to assist the lead ITU-T
study group on ICTs and
climate change (currently
Study Group 5), in
collaboration with other
bodies, in the development
of methodologies to assess:
- the
level of
energy
efficiency
in the ICT
sector and
the
application
of
telecommunications/ICTs
in non-ICT
sectors; and
- the the
complete
lifecycle
GHG
emissions of
telecommunication/ICT
equipment,
in
collaboration
with other
relevant
bodies, in
order to
establish
best
practice in
the sector
against an
agreed set
of metrics
to enable
the benefits
of reuse,
refurbishment
and
recycling to
be
quantified
in order to
help achieve
reductions
in GHG
emissions
both in the
telecommunication/ICT
sector and
in the use
of ICTs in
other
sectors;
- to promote the work of
ITU and cooperate with UN
entities and others in
activities related to
climate change working
towards a progressive and
measurable reduction in
energy consumption and GHG
emissions throughout the
lifecycle of
telecommunication/ICT
equipment;
- to utilize the current
Joint Coordination Activity
on ICT and on climate change
in specialist and specific
discussions with other
industries, drawing upon the
expertise existing in other
forums, industrial sectors
(and their relevant forums)
and academia in order to:
-
demonstrate
ITU
leadership
in GHG
reductions
and energy
savings in
the ICT
sector;
- ensure
that ITU
actively
leads in the
application
of ICTs in
other
industries
and
contributes
to the
reduction in
GHG
emissions,
invites Member States, Sector Members
and Associates:
- to continue to contribute actively to ITU
on ICTs and climate change;
- to continue or initiate
public and private programs
that include ICTs and
climate change, giving due
consideration to relevant
ITU initiatives;
- to support and
contribute to the wider
United Nations process on
climate change;
- to take necessary
measures to reduce the
effects of climate change by
developing and using more
energy-efficient ICT
devices, applications and
networks and through the
application of ICTs in other
fields;
- to promote recycling and
reuse of
telecommunication/ICT
equipment;
- to continue to support
the work of ITU-R in remote
sensing (active and passive)
for environmental
observation and other radiocommunication systems
that can be used to support
climate monitoring, disaster
prediction, alerting and
response in accordance with
relevant resolutions adopted
by radiocommunication
assemblies and world
radiocommunication
conferences
|

|