With efforts to fight climate change growing apace around the world, the IT industry is also doing its bit, as the world's largest technology fair starting next week in Germany aims to show.
CeBIT, starting in the German city of Hanover on Monday, brings together 5,500 tech firms all keen to show off gadgets that are innovative, cutting edge and cool-and this year also green.
Worldwide Internet usage needs the equivalent of 14 power stations to power the required computers and servers, producing the same amount of carbon emissions as the entire airline industry, according to German magazine Stern. And with energy prices rising around the world, if the threat of climate change doesn't persuade you to change then your rising electricity bill will.
Germany's biggest web hosting company for instance, Berlin-based Strato-home to 3.5 million websites-uses the same amount of electricity as a small town, and power is the firm's single biggest cost item, Stern says.
And it is with this in focus, and with some Gallic tech flair provided from this year's co-host France, that CeBIT organisers hope to restore some of the event's somewhat waning appeal.
The trade fair, which runs until March 9 in Hanover's sprawling exhibition centre, is the world's biggest tech gathering, leaving the likes of Las Vegas, Barcelona and Berlin in the dark.
But this year has seen a five percent fall in the number of exhibitors and a 10 percent drop in the surface area they are using to display their wares. The event has even been shortened by a day in an effort to cut costs. In going green CeBIT organisers have teamed up with the Climate Savers Computing Initiative, a group comprising leading tech giants like Intel, Google and Microsoft trying to lessen the industry's carbon footprint. And exhibitors at CeBIT will be getting in on the act.
Deutsche Telekom, for instance, says its stand at CeBIT will be 100 percent powered by renewable energy, while German PC maker Fujitsu Siemens will present "Green PCs, intelligent cooling concepts, low power consumption and innovative power management."