Go Green – Telecommute to Work
It seems that technology is touching every aspect of our lives and telecommuting is one of the biggest changes. Telecommuting is essentially working from home and every year it gets easier for employers to offer this option to their employees. Internet based collaboration, including online meetings, document sharing, information access, and video conferencing are all making the concept of telecommuting a reality. Companies are more socially responsible today and offer products and services that enable information sharing and collaboration via the Internet and are making telecommuting more productive and convenient than ever before.
Impact on the environment is one of the most positive reasons for companies to promote telecommuting to their workforce. We are living in a time when most things that we do as a society tear down or destroy our planet. Telecommuting is definitely one thing that we can do to help save it. So what are the ways that telecommuting can help our environment? The following four examples are at the top of my list:
Vehicle Costs:
A tremendous amount of energy is required to produce transportation equipment such as automobiles, buses, trains and jet aircraft. If telecommuting is promoted, there will be less use of this equipment and less energy will be required for production, maintenance and repair of this equipment. Even more significantly, fuel resources needed to operate this equipment will be reduced, as well. Many studies have been done quantifying the large amount of resources wasted every year by commuters stuck in rush hour traffic.
Highway Costs:
The building, repair and maintenance of highways requires a large consumption of energy. Not only in the operation of the highway construction and repair equipment, but also in the manufacture and transportation of the required materials. An increase in the percentage of people telecommuting to work will decrease the need for expanded highways and associated road maintenance. In addition to highways, parking lots are continuing to consume more and more of our land surface area. If a larger percentage of people telecommuting to work, existing highways could be reduced in size and many parking lots could be converted to parks.
Office Building Costs:
The office building has heating, cooling and lighting needs, and the materials to build it and maintain it require energy in their production and transportation. Working from home requires only modest incremental demands on energy for heating, cooling and lighting needs, and makes effective use of existing building space and facilities. The trend toward video conferencing and internet based meetings is also gathering steam. Technology is finally making these modes of conducting business both dependable and productive. Having people attend meetings remotely reduces office space requirements, especially those large meeting rooms which are used only part of each day. These large spaces take a lot of energy to heat, cool and light.
Air Quality:
Whether or not you believe that the internal combustion engine is contributing to the erosion of the ozone layer and consequently to global warming; nobody can argue the negative affect that they have on air quality. One of the largest sources of pollution is the automobile. This is especially true of slow-moving automobiles that often exist in heavy, congested rush hour traffic. Of course, one solution to this problem is increasing the size and number of our roads, but an even better solution is to encourage those who can telecommute to do so.
Telecommuting is definitely one of the positive things that we are doing today as a society and not just in the United States. This is a worldwide trend that will grow as each developing country becomes Internet enabled.
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