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BT announces £250m wind-farm scheme

BT wind farm
Business News
Channels: Business News Tags: renewable, carbon footprint, electricity

BT has revealed it's planning to implement a wind-farm project that it hopes will supply a quarter of its electricity by 2016. The telecoms company said the project could cost up to £250m.

To our surprise, it transpires BT already has the country's largest green-electricity contract with npower and British Gas Business, and claims the company is responsible for 0.7 per cent of the UK's electricity consumption. BT is aiming to reduce its carbon emissions by 80 per cent within the next nine years -- a pretty hefty task given that it's clocked up 640,000 tons of CO2 this year alone. Despite this, it claims to have already reduced its CO2 emissions by 60 percent since 1996.

"There is a pressing need for industry to cut carbon in ways that make business sense," said the group's finance director, Hanif Lalani. Lalani suggested that wind energy would "play an important part" in achieving BT's CO2 reduction goals, but also praised broadband technology for its role in cutting the need to travel, through home working and video conferencing.

According to BT, by 2016 the wind farms could generate enough electricity to power a city the size of Coventry, which would be about 250MW in total. It is currently looking at suitable sites, but has already applied for planning permission for test masts at Goonhilly Satellite Earth Station in Cornwall, Wideford Hill Radio Station in the Orkney Islands and Scousburgh Radio Station in Shetland.

Wind turbines have previously faced considerable resistance from campaigners, many of whom see the masts as a blight on the landscape. Still, BT claimed in a statement that it is "committed to working responsibly with local communities" and will "ensure that they are engaged throughout the development process".

John Hutton, secretary of state for business, enterprise and regulatory reform, said BT's move was "a great example of how businesses can contribute and help us meet our ambitious target to dramatically increase the amount of energy we get from renewable sources". Yet, although a positive move by BT, much of the company CO2 emissions actually come from its considerable data-centre capacity. And research by technology analysts Gartner has found that data centres are responsible for almost a quarter of the CO2 emissions from the information and communications technology industry (PCs and monitors account for 40 percent of the total). Many other technology suppliers, including Intel, Sun and IBM, are also trying to improve the efficiency of their energy use within the data centre and beyond.

Posted: 19 October 2007, 01:50pm by David Meyer
Based on: BT announces wind-farm scheme on ZDNet.co.uk
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