ITU-T in a Nutshell
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Transcript ITU-T in a Nutshell
ITU-T Workshop
ICTs: Building the Green City of
the Future
Arthur Levin
Chief, ITU-TSB
United Nations Pavilion
EXPO-2010, 14 May 2010
Shanghai, China
May 2010
1
Tackling Climate Change
Why ICTs?
Why ITU?
May 2010
2
Introduction to ITU
Founded in 1865, it is the oldest specialized
agency of the UN system
Standards making is the first ITU activities
191 Member States, 780 private sector entities
HQ Geneva, 11 regional offices, 760 staff/80 nationalities
Named as one of the world’s ten most enduring institutions
by Booz Allen
Five elected officials:
Secretary-General
Deputy Secretary-General
Director of the Radiocommunication Bureau (BR)
Director of the Telecommunication Standardization Bureau (TSB)
Director of the Telecommunication Development Bureau (BDT)
May 2010
3
ITU Structure
Plenipotentiary Conference
ITU Council
General
Secretariat
ITU-T
World
Telecommunication
Standardization
Assembly
ITU-R
World/Regional
Radiocommunication
Conference
Radiocommunication
Assembly
ITU-D
World/Regional
Telecommunication
Development
Conference
TELECOM
May 2010
4
ITU Membership
Member States: 191 governments
ITU-T, ITU-R, ITU-D Sector Members (565)
ITU-T Sector membership fee:
31,800 CHF (= 20k EUR)
Associates (154): have right to participate in one study group
Associate membership fee:
10,600 CHF (= 7k EUR)
Today, 95% of the work in ITU-T is done by the private sector
(Sector Members and Associates)
May 2010
5
ITU-T Recommendations
connect the world…
Without ITU-T standards you
couldn’t make a telephone call
from one side of the world to
another.
Without ITU-T standards the
Internet wouldn’t function.
May 2010
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ITU-T in a Nutshell
Work (mostly) done in Study Groups (10 of them)
ITU-T Product: Recommendations (= “standards”)
+ Telecommunication Standardization Advisory Group (TSAG)
Freely available to the public
Unique partnership of private sector (Sector Members)
& government (Member States)
Truly global
Consensus decisions
Fast procedures, transparent procedures
Common Patent Policy ITU-T/ITU-R/ISO/IEC
May 2010
7
ITU and Academia
1st Kaleidoscope event 2008:
140 contributions from
academic institutions from
around the world
2nd Kaleidoscope event:
Innovations for Digital Inclusion
September 2009,
Mar del Plata, Argentina
3rd Event: Future Networks
(India 2010)
Best papers proposed as new
work
Published
May 2010
8
Did you Know?
Facebook alone uses an amount of capacity more than the entire
Internet in 2000
It is estimated that the total electricity used in powering and cooling the 2
million servers of the 5 major search engines is around 5 gigawatts – which is
the same amount of power used by the city of Las Vegas on the hottest day of
the year
The Google data center in Oregon (US) consumes as much electricity each day
as the city of Geneva
Data centers consumer more electricity than Argentina or the Netherlands
Between 16-50 Megatons of waste PCs and monitors are disposed of each year.
This is enough to fill a container train of length equal to the circumference of the
earth
While the average lifespan of a mobile phone is 5 years, 100 million Europeans
will replace a phone this year after only one year of use
100 million customers receiving online phone bills would save 109,100 ton of
CO2
Whereas 80 Kg. of copper per line and per Km. were necessary in 1915 to carry
a signal, only 0.01g of glass are sufficient today, a factor of 8 million
May 2010
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GLOBAL FRAMEWORK
1992 Framework Convention on Climate Change
1997 Kyoto Protocol was adopted at COP-3
while Convention encouraged developed countries to
stabilize GHG emissions, the Protocol commits them to do
so
2001 Detailed implementation rules adopted at
COP-7 in Marrakesh
Annex B (developed countries) to reduce GHG emissions in
period 2008-12 (6 gases, notably CO2))
average overall reduction of 5.2% against 1990
baseline; national targets vary
EU-15 countries have a tougher target of -8%
• aviation and shipping were excluded
•
Developing countries: only to monitor and report GHG
emissions
Protocol established Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)
allows parties to earn and trade emission credits through
projects either in developed or developing countries
ICT not covered
May 2010
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GLOBAL FRAMEWORK
2005
Kyoto Protocol came into effect for 177 countries;
189 now have ratified
2007
Fourth Assessment Report of IPCC
clear link between GHG emission and climate change
GHG emissions continue to grow as world continues to
industrialize
2012
First commitment period under Kyoto Protocol will
expire
new framework is needed to deliver the stringent
emission reductions the IPCC says are needed
May 2010
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TOWARD A NEW GLOBAL
FRAMEWORK
2007 COP-13 in Bali launched process for negotiation of the
new Agreement
• established AWGLCA (Ad Hoc Working Group on Long Term
Cooperative Action) to develop work program
2008 3 AWGLCA meetings: Bangkok, Bonn, Accra
•
**ITU is an observer
2009 Meeting of COP-14: Poznan, Poland
•
3 more AWGLCA meetings; ITU sends input
2009 COP-15 meets in Copenhagen
•
•
•
•
•
Plenary “takes note” of the Copenhagen Accord
12 paragraphs of text (started with 200 pages)
100 countries have now signed up; but not China and India
Annex I commitments are all conditional on a new global agreement
Work on underlying Agreement continues
2010 COP-16 in Mexico
May 2010
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