Mobile World Congress is Slow On Green Mobile
Talk about great idea and horrible timing. Economy is weak to say it mildly. Consumers are stretched and companies are scaling back in an unprecedented way. So who cares for new shiny green widget? At the Mobile World Congress, going on in Barcelona, Spain, Nokia and Motorola are showcasing green mobile handsets.
In a marketplace, which is still divided over the question of cost effectiveness of green technologies, Nokia and Motorola are going in for the gentle hype to establish leadership on clean technology. Nokia has been successfully running recycling campaign for quite some time.
Nokia with 5630 Xpress Music Machine and Motorola with MOTO W233 Renew are reaching out to niche segment. From New York Times:
[Nokia] features include a light sensor that detects natural light, allowing the phone to save energy. Most Nokia phones now beep when they are fully charged, alerting the owner to detach the charger from the wall socket.
Motorola will be displaying its MOTO W233 Renew, which was released this month in the United States. The W233 is made using plastic from recycled water bottles and can itself be entirely recycled. The phone costs $9.99 with a two-year contract and for now can be bought only through T-Mobile. The phone is also sold in packaging made of 100 percent recycled paper and includes a prepaid shipping envelope for buyers to send in their old mobile phone for recycling.
Ericsson’s GreenHeart project is a step in the same direction – project designed more to demonstrate corporate commitment and less driven by revenue objectives:
The GreenHeart™ is a full concept with all life cycle in mind. It includes features such as bio-plastic housings, recycled plastic keypads, zero charger with 3.5mW standby power, HTML based e-manuals, a game style educational application ‘Ecomate’ and environmentally conscious packaging. Once the technology reaches maturity, new techniques and materials will then be included in the portfolio and a market wide launch. One ‘eco’ product by itself will not make a difference but by learning through this concept study we are ensuring the entire portfolio in future will be more sustainable
Apple, with all it’s big claim on general green computing, is yet to make a clean statement on iPhone’s footprint.
What mobile industry needs is a common taxonomy and common benchmarking framework for mobile handsets. This is essential for companies to procure mobile handsets on cost and energy efficiency basis.
[Picture courtsey NYT]
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