What Time is Earth Hour?
Just stumbled across this on the Google blog, and looks like I probably missed Earth Hour. I could have switched my server off (I have one home server that hardly serves anything!), but too late now. I used to be a very green person. I was a member of the Uni Conservation Society, I even worked in the environmental research branch of the Foresty Commission for a while, so at heart I still think green, although admittedly in recent years, I have done less, and consumed more. Here is the deal straight from the horses (the horse being Google) mouth:
Cities around the world will participate in Earth Hour on Saturday, turning off their lights to raise awareness for energy conservation.
You might remember that last year we “turned the lights out” on the Google.com homepage during Earth Hour to symbolize our own commitment to sustainability. We won’t be turning out the lights on our homepage again this year. Our users come first, and while we received lots of enthusiastic feedback last year, some found an all-black Google.com to be a little confusing. (Also, darkened screens don’t actually save energy — modern displays use the same amount of power regardless of what they display.) We are actively supporting this year’s Vote Earth, an Earth Hour 2009 initiative to gather one billion words to present at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December of this year. Participants can share their opinions about climate change through the Earth Connect social platform which incorporates Google tools including Google Maps, App Engine, Friend Connect, Google Translate, Blogger and Feedburner.
After all, Earth Hour is about more than dimming lights; it’s about making a commitment to reduce energy consumption throughout the year. At Google, we take this commitment seriously and over the past twelve months we’ve worked hard to reduce Google’s own power use and to help others reduce theirs:
- We remodeled our San Francisco office to achieve a Gold rating by the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED Green Building Rating System
- Our engineers are working on a tool called Google PowerMeter that will show consumers home energy information almost in real time, right on their computer
- We’ve designed the most efficient data centers possible and are sharing some of our best practices with industry peers
- In the fall we compiled tips and tricks to help our users save energy (and money)
- Our summit on plug-in vehicles in Washington was standing room only, with policy, technology, and energy experts all discussing an electric vehicle future
Google will continue to work hard this year to be as green as possible as a company, and we encourage others to take an hour on Saturday and commit to the Earth too. For some great ideas on ways you can save energy every hour of every day through computing efficiency, check out Climate Savers Computing Initiative and their recent video challenge: “Power Down for the Planet.”
Source: Google Blogspot – An hour for the Earth
This is one of the things that is great about Google. I have worked in an international bank for over a decade, and there is always talk of energy initiatives and the like, but they really make no effort. Recently LCD screens went up by the lifts on all floors, allegedly to provide information. 99% of the time they just show the company logo and a bunch of self congratulating marketing crap. But the most annoying thing is that no-one ever looks at them, as they are in the lift lobby. Noone hangs around the lift lobby. My company also places glossy brochures on our desks in a regular basis (this initiative apparently comes from the motherland, and is not UK driven) but with have an intranet and email that can deliver these messages quicker, cheaper and more efficiently than printing glossy magazines and fliers that only a few people actually look at. Google would never do this. At least I assume that they do not do this. Madness. Waste of resources.
