Flexible working can help save the planet by reducing greenhouse gas
emissions, academics claimed today.
An
Oxford
University study said that the reduction in commuting time resulting from
people working at home will mean less carbon dioxide, one of the gases that
causes global warming, being released into the atmosphere.
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However, the research warned that, while more and more people want to work
from home, the benefits are being undermined by poor co-operation by government
and business over issues such as transport and the provision of IT.
"The research is clear: working from home really can help reduce our carbon
footprint as a country if we manage it correctly," said
Professor
David Banister, one of the authors of the study.
"Managing home working correctly will involve changes in behaviour. This
would include providing secure and efficient technology to facilitate
collaboration, as well as properly managing heating at the employers end and the
reduction of office space and heating costs at the employee's end.
"If people work more than one day a week from home, significant environmental
savings can be made."
The study argues for more coherent policies to take advantage of the
environmental savings that could be made from more sensible working policies.
"Working from home has not featured very highly in government policy and
there has not been any clear statement or encouragement from central or local
government," said Professor Banister.
"There is an opportunity for teleworking to sit at the heart of a
co-ordinated policy that could involve sustainable transport."
He added that home working would only really take-off with either a
carbon-tax or tax incentives by the government.
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