The economic crisis has slowed the uptake of green IT products, according to analysts.
A recent report from Forrester Research found that enterprise uptake of environmentally friendly IT products had slowed down for the first time since 2007.

Flagging economy slowing the growth of environmentally aware technology drives
V3.co.uk, 16 Jul 2009
The economic crisis has slowed the uptake of green IT products, according to analysts.
A recent report from Forrester Research found that enterprise uptake of environmentally friendly IT products had slowed down for the first time since 2007.
Some 11 per cent of the companies surveyed planned to slow down implementation of green IT initiatives due to the recession, and 38 per cent planned to maintain their pace. This compares to an October 2008 survey that found that just five per cent were slowing green initiatives and 39 per cent were maintaining pace.
"Sustainability and energy-efficient practices are becoming well entrenched in IT organisations worldwide," wrote Forrester analyst Christopher Mines.
"But the pace of green IT implementation is slowing in some companies; its priority is dropping in the face of slackening overall demand and tighter availability of investment capital."
There was some good news, however, as 12 per cent of firms plan to accelerate green IT initiatives, up from 10 per cent last October.
The study found that cost-cutting is the principal factor for companies adopting green IT programmes, followed by the need to conserve space and avoid building new datacentres.
Ultimately, however, Mines sees little harm to the green IT movement from the recession.
The analyst noted that sustainability programmes are well established in many major companies, and smaller firms will increasingly look to more efficient platforms as business recovers and growth resumes.

New service could help firms save save money and energy

Lord Drayson hopes the tech industry will achieve the same prestige as the film sector
Green efforts and employee programmes take centre stage in new report
Web firm promises greenest facility yet

This week we cover the continuing controversy surrounding the Orange T-Mobile deal

Using managed services to protect mobile data users from the latest security threats
Counting the cost of data security: the benefits of secured mobile services

Shifting Disaster Recovery targets with SharePoint and SQL server configurations
Using a hostbased recovery system for mission-critical systems
Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies; IThound.com brings you over 6,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.

Replacement warning functioning normally, claims software giant

Annual initiative warns of phishing, ID theft and social network...
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article