Companies confront a new climate challenge: home offices
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[May 05, 2022] By
Paresh Dave
(Reuters) - Tech and financial companies
leading efforts to cut climate changing emissions are finding a new
challenge from remote work: the CO2 spewing out of home offices.
A few companies have begun counting what happens when employees boot up
computers at home, turn up gas furnaces and ignore the world's most
energy-efficient corporate campuses. It turns out that home setups
popularized by the pandemic are eroding some of the climate benefit of
abandoned commutes.
"Emissions didn't go away," said Amanda von Almen, head of emissions
reduction at Salesforce.com Inc. "They just shifted to another area."
Half of 20 big companies Reuters spoke to, including Salesforce, have
estimated emissions from home offices.
Six of those reported detailed figures, showing their half a million
workers collectively emitted the equivalent of 134,000 tonnes of carbon
dioxide in about the first year of the pandemic. That is equivalent to
consuming 15 million gallons of gasoline or burning 67,000 tonnes of
coal.
While there are benefits to the climate from millions of employees not
commuting when they work from home, the findings underscore that remote
work is not a simple solution to cutting corporate emissions.
"Remote working has not delivered the environmental benefits that some
people expected," said Steve Sorrell, professor of energy policy at
University of Sussex. "But they should probably have paid more attention
to the decades of work in this area that suggest that environmental
impacts may be less than expected."
Companies reported varying benefits from the recent shift to telework.
Salesforce found remote work has cut emissions 29% per employee, while
Boston-based fund manager Fidelity Investments Inc found that moving to
mostly remote work wiped out 87% of its emissions cuts in 2020.
Facebook, now Meta Platforms Inc, calculated that employees through
commutes and remote work produced more than a tonne of CO2 per person in
2020, down from 2 tonnes the year before - when just commuting was
counted.
However, half of those companies Reuters surveyed are not counting home
office emissions, including tech and finance leaders Apple Inc,
Amazon.com Inc and Wells Fargo & Co.
"We anticipated these emissions are small relative to our carbon
footprint and we are still evolving our methodology," Apple said in
explaining its decision.
And even companies estimating the output from homes are divided on what
to do about it. To honor its pledge to operate on 100% renewable energy,
Meta has bought enough renewable energy credits to match remote workers'
use, but it is not offsetting home-office natural gas.
Salesforce and Alphabet Inc's Google excluded home-office electricity
from their 100% goals as they weigh different initiatives for home use.
Both, though, buy carbon credits to offset estimated emissions from
telework.
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Rooftop solar panels are seen at the Google headquarters in Mountain
View, California, March 3, 2008. REUTERS/Erin Siegal/File Photo
Climate experts say those solutions scratch the surface: After pouring billions
of dollars into traditional offices decked with rooftop solar, bathed in natural
lighting and equipped with water recycling, employers transitioning to hybrid
work need clear plans to make every location just as green.
"If we are serious about meeting our targets, then the corporate world needs to
take the lead and think about homes as areas of improvement," said Eleftheria
Kontou, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
HOW MANY LIGHTBULBS DOES IT TAKE...
One roadblock to counting home office emissions is that there is no standard on
how or what to count. Microsoft Corp, trying to solve the problem itself,
concluded that remote staff work eight hours a day using a laptop, two monitors
and three lightbulbs.
Others including Salesforce have surveyed workers about their homes and energy
bills, and many companies just look at typical residential usage in the regions
where their workers reside.
But if heating a home office requires heating an entire house, how are emissions
counted? And how to account for a headquarters office that is available but
unused?
At least five research studying remote work, including one from the
International Energy Agency, have generally warned that emissions could rise as
companies keep powering traditional offices to provide flexibility and some
workers take on further, albeit less frequent, commutes.
"In a worst-case scenario a hybrid working future could...create a world where
buildings and homes are used inefficiently with a transport system that is
unable to respond to changing demand and potentially more cars on roads,"
U.K.-based consultancy Carbon Trust wrote in a 2021 report on remote work.
In the face of uncertainty over counting, outdoor retailer REI Co-op will wait
for "uniform industry standards" before accounting for the 10% of its workforce
that is remote or mobile, said Andrew Dempsey, senior manager for
sustainability, and it is not alone.
The nonprofit clearinghouse CDP said that fewer than 200 of the 13,000 companies
reporting environmental data to it last year mentioned remote work and included
relevant emissions. The Greenhouse Gas Protocol, the most common accounting
tool, has offered guidance on counting telework since 2011 but it does not
specify how to calculate those emissions.
Corporate climate adviser William Theisen, North American chief of Atos SE's
EcoAct, described the limited reporting as concerning.
"I don’t think avoiding it is the responsible way to go," he said. "If everyone
was waiting for crystal-clear standards on counting remote work emissions,
nothing would happen."
(Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Peter Henderson and Lisa Shumaker)
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