GSMA Urges Industry Leaders to Scale Existing Smart Tech in The Race to Net Zero

GSMA

PR92687

 

LONDON, Oct. 29, 2021 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --

 

Underused Smart Tech Could Contribute 40% of Required Carbon Emission Savings

For Net Zero Goals

 

 

The GSMA calls on business leaders and policymakers to harness the potential of

mobile connectivity and smart technology to achieve net zero by 2050 and limit

global heating to within 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.

 

Smart technology could contribute 40% of the required carbon emissions savings

for the world's net zero goals.

 

These connected technologies already exist. But today, new research from the

GSMA, backed by the Carbon Trust, shows mobile connectivity and smart

technology are significantly underused by energy-intensive industries, such as

power and manufacturing.

 

In the energy sector, connected technology is only used in around 35% of solar

grids and 10% of wind grids globally. Around 5% of the manufacturing sector

uses connected technology. And yet, these technologies could help fulfil almost

40% of the cuts required in carbon emissions by 2030, if these industries are

to reach net zero by 2050.

 

GSMA's Director General, Mats Granryd, said, "The risk is that without smart

technology used widely, the world will miss 2050 net zero commitments. Business

leaders and policymakers must act now to harness the power of mobile technology

and connectivity as a key lever in the global race to net zero.

 

As low and zero-carbon technology evolves, people might think we will need to

rely on future technology solutions to meet net zero goals. At the GSMA, we

disagree. We believe that many of the smart tools and technology needed to

drive down carbon emissions, especially in the energy sector, already exist -

they just aren't being used to their full potential."

 

The GSMA research focuses on four energy-intensive industries, including

energy, transport, buildings, and manufacturing. It shows how increased

connectivity and mobile technology can enable global savings of around 11

gigatonnes of carbon emissions by 2030. These savings are the same as

decommissioning 2,700 coal-fired power stations.  

 

As political and business leaders from across the world convene in Glasgow next

week for COP26, the GSMA encourages leaders to consider our latest research

that shows how existing technology can dramatically reduce carbon emissions and

increase energy efficiency. The findings assume halving emissions by 2030, as

called for by the 'Exponential Roadmap Initiative'[1], in line with limiting

global heating to 1.5 degrees C.

 

Carbon Trust's CEO, Tom Delay said, "This new analysis by GSMA on the

enablement effect of increasing connectivity across four energy-intensive

industries, builds on previous research by the Carbon Trust. It highlights the

crucial role that smart and mobile technology can play in cutting carbon

emissions and makes clear that much of the technology already exists – it just

needs to be rolled out at scale across industries."

 

The key findings of the research include:  

 

Energy Industry

- 46% of the cut required in carbon emissions in the energy sector could come

from the rollout of connected wind and solar energy grids – equivalent to 4

gigatonnes of CO2 or decommissioning around 1000 coal-fired power plants by

2030.

- Today, connected technology is used in around 35% of solar grids and 10% of

wind grids globally.  

- Without using connected grid technology, carbon emission savings would be

approximately 10% less – equating to an additional 1 gigatonnes of unnecessary

CO2 by 2030.

Transport Industry

- 65% of the required carbon emissions reductions across transport could come

from digital infrastructure to support electric vehicles, working from home,

and, optimised routing and fleet management of road haulage and commercial

shipping.

- This would amount to a saving of 2.8 gigatonnes of CO2 over the next 9 years

– equating to 2.8 billion flights from New York to Paris

- Today, electric car charging station numbers are equivalent to only 0.8% of

all cars on the road.

 

Buildings Industry

- 43% of the required carbon reductions in the buildings sector could come from

the impact of installing smart meters in residential properties and smart

buildings that use connected heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC)

systems.

- Installing smart meters and connected buildings would amount to approximately

2.2 gigatonnes of CO2 over the next nine years – the same emissions as heating

more than 90 million homes over the same period.

- Today, only 60 million commercial premises have smart electricity and gas

connections, a small fraction of the total commercial buildings globally.  

Manufacturing Industry

- 16% of the carbon reductions required in manufacturing could be provided by

smart manufacturing processes, equivalent to 1.4 gigatonnes of CO2; equivalent

to the emissions from manufacturing 140 million cars

- Today, connected technology is used in 1% of factories across the

manufacturing sector globally

- GSMA Intelligence analysed the impact of smart manufacturing processes

including IoT (Internet of Things) sensors for more efficient factory

production monitoring, diagnostics, warehouse management, and inventory

tracking.

 

For more information about this research and methodology, click here

[https://www.gsma.com/betterfuture/climate ]; this microsite shares further

research from the Carbon Trust and GSMA Intelligence about mobile connectivity

and technology's role in achieving net zero.

 

GSMA at COP26

At COP26, in the Green Zone [https://ukcop26.org/the-conference/green-zone-programme-of-events/ ], the GSMA is showcasing a 5G-powered, electric, Connected Autonomous Vehicle (CAV). It

highlights how 5G's dramatic connectivity speeds will help make the future of

transport more sustainable. Real-time air pollution sensors will also provide

data from various locations across the UK.

 

On Wednesday 3 November, the GSMA will also host an event and panel discussion

with industry leaders: #MobileNetZero - How can mobile tech help us reach Net

Zero faster, easier and cheaper? To register and find out more information,

please click here [https://www.gsma.com/betterfuture/gsma_events/mobilenetzero-how-can-mobile-tech-help-us-reach-net-zero-faster-easier-and-cheaper?ID=a6g1r000000kOwwAAE&JobID=933462&utm_source=sfmc&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=IPEvents_2021_15_4_Mobile_net_zero++-+20211021_174011&utm_content=https%3a%2f%2fwww.gsma.com%2fbetterfuture%2fgsma_events%2fmobilenetzero-how-can-mobile-tech-help-us-reach-net-zero-faster-easier-and-cheaper].

 

About GSMA

The GSMA is a global organisation unifying the mobile ecosystem to discover,

develop and deliver innovation foundational to positive business environments

and societal change. Our vision is to unlock the full power of connectivity so

that people, industry, and society thrive. Representing mobile operators and

organisations across the mobile ecosystem and adjacent industries, the GSMA

delivers for its members across three broad pillars: Connectivity for Good,

Industry Services and Solutions, and Outreach. This activity includes advancing

policy, tackling today's biggest societal challenges, underpinning the

technology and interoperability that make mobile work, and providing the

world's largest platform to convene the mobile ecosystem at the MWC and M360

series of events.

 

We invite you to find out more at gsma.com

 

[1] J. Falk, O. Gaffney, et al. Exponential Roadmap. 1.5.1 (2020).

 

www.exponentialroadmap.org

 

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1385555/GSMA_Logo.jpg  

 

Source:  GSMA

 

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