According to the World Economic Forum, digital technologies could deliver up to 20 per cent of the International Energy Agency’s 2050 net-zero emissions target. With the Climate Change Committee assessing that local authorities will struggle to deliver on their net-zero ambitions, we’ve looked at how cloud software could help.
Digital technology is the powerhouse behind so many carbon-cutting initiatives today, from optimising transport and making supply chains more sustainable to managing green energy. In local government, the picture is no different. Cloud software is helping councils to monitor and manage their energy use and emissions, and to work smarter.
Tracking & recording energy use & emissions
The 2050 net-zero target has directly affected the public sector, making it essential for organisations first to identify and quantify their emissions and energy use, and then track them over time. The latest technologies will enable local authorities to tackle this challenge from several angles.
For managing properties and estates, digital solutions can analyse energy use and costs across a portfolio. They can store meter readings, tariffs and bills, making it possible to identify inefficient assets and to build carbon-reduction strategies into existing asset-maintenance plans. At Middlesborough Council, for example, Civica’s solution is helping the local authority’s property team to reduce waste in resources and work more efficiently.
Carbon can now be built into expense tracking too, for example by recording emissions related to business travel, giving employees guidance on the most sustainable choices and helping local authorities to track their overall Scope 1 emissions.
Working smarter
This is what digital technology excels at. Inefficiency in any process typically wastes energy as well as time, and cloud software can be transformative because of the data visibility it provides.
For example, any activity that has a mobile workforce, for example community-based healthcare or property management, can be prone to duplication of work or unnecessary journeys. When software makes it possible to see everything in one place, this problem can be easily solved.
In health and social care, scheduling software can now use intelligent routing to minimise travel time, avoid duplicate appointments and allow healthcare professionals to hand over tasks without needing to return to the office. Similar solutions are available for vehicle fleets, where cloud-optimised, route-planning software creates efficient routes that take into account variables such as driver availability and vehicle capacity.
For teams that look after property portfolios, cloud solutions can allocate maintenance jobs nearest to where operatives are, minimising driving distances. And they can link up to IoT-powered ‘smart city’ initiatives that use connected sensors to make activities such as waste collection more energy efficient.
The potential for carbon-efficient working extends everywhere, even into kitchens. Caterers can use cloud solutions to calculate the CO2 values of their menus so they can reduce their environmental footprint and ensure that foodservice is contributing to overall carbon targets.
Working with a lighter footprint
Cloud software has a central role to play in helping local authorities reach their sustainability targets. It makes it possible to share datacentres, reducing the need to manage and upgrade IT equipment that will have high embodied carbon as well as cost. Cloud solutions also allow teams to work from anywhere, reducing travel time to and from offices, and potentially freeing up office space.
Net zero is daunting. But as these examples show, technology is evolving quickly to support intelligent ways for local authorities to work towards their targets. The attraction of the software-driven journey to carbon reduction is that it doesn’t rely on huge investment or hard-to-implement changes to working practices.
With the right solution, carbon-efficient ways of working can rapidly become business as usual.
Jeff Hewitt is the executive director for local government at Civica.