24.09.2007 12:00:00
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Juniper Networks Participates in Carbon Disclosure Project; Setting New Energy Efficiency Standards in the Networking Industry
Juniper Networks, Inc. (NASDAQ:JNPR), the leader in high-performance
networking, announced its sponsorship and continued participation in the
Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), which launched its fifth report, CDP5,
today in New York City. CDP is a global standardized mechanism by which
companies report their greenhouse gas emissions to institutional
investors; it hosts one of the largest registries of corporate
greenhouse gas data in the world at www.cdproject.net.
"We applaud the companies that have taken the initiative to inventory
and measure the impact they have on the environment and then put plans
in place to reduce their Green House Gas (GHG) emissions," said Paul
Dickinson, CEO of CDP. "The Carbon Disclosure Project Secretariat is
confident that the economy of the future will be based more on the
movement of bytes than atoms. As a major enabler of the network economy,
we are excited to see Juniper Networks make strides to address the
issues of climate change within their business."
Over the past two years, Juniper Networks has invested in the
infrastructure and systems to be able to inventory and measure its
carbon footprint on a global basis. Between 2005 and 2006, Juniper made
significant strides in improving its energy efficiency around the world.
Examples of Juniper’s Energy Efficiency
Successes
At Juniper’s corporate headquarters facility
in Sunnyvale, Calif., the company reduced its emissions (Electrical
and Natural Gas) from 17,374 metric tons of carbon in 2005 to 14,885
in 2006 (down 14 percent), while simultaneously expanding headcount at
the facility by more than 14 percent. Greater efficiency can be
attributed, in part, to placing window film on windows; switching to a
day cleaning service; and replacing transformers and heating and air
conditioning units with energy-efficient systems.
At Juniper’s east coast headquarters in
Westford, Mass., Juniper reduced its carbon footprint by 23 percent,
going from 7715 metric tons of carbon in 2005 to 5929 in 2006. The
move of two major labs into a new facility with centralized DC power
plants and an improved air-conditioning design, along with tighter
controls over the building’s automation
system were the primary contributors in reducing the facility’s
overall consumption.
At Juniper’s Tokyo office, electrical
emissions were reduced from 626 metric tons of carbon in 2005 to 280
in 2006, due to a focus on energy savings opportunities with the
property management firm at Juniper’s
offices in the Shinjuku Park Tower.
At Juniper’s Amsterdam office, the company
received 17 percent of its power in 2006 from green power sources,
including nuclear, wind, and solar sources.
Some Areas of Improvement for Juniper’s
Focus
Aligned with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s
recently released study, Juniper Networks has found that there is room
for improvement in the energy efficiency of its global Data Centers.
The company has initiatives underway, including making changes to its
physical sites, as well as leveraging virtualization software to
reduce the energy, cooling and space requirements of its Data Centers.
Juniper is targeting to reduce its server footprint by 30 percent at
year end.
As the company continues to grow, opening new offices in emerging
markets will be done in an energy-efficient manner. As in the past,
Juniper Networks is locating, whenever possible, new facilities in
close proximity to mass transit options and looking at ways in which
energy costs can be managed – e.g. reusing
equipment no longer needed in other facilities, encouraging
telecommuting and the use of alternative methods of commuting to work,
etc. For example, in Sunnyvale, 24 percent of Juniper employees use
alternative forms of transportation rather than driving alone for some
part of their commute.
"Juniper takes corporate responsibility
seriously and is focused on achieving real change that benefits the
environment and, ultimately, our employees, customers and shareholders,”
said Brad Minnis, director of environmental health, safety and security. "We
are leveraging our history and culture of innovation to do our part to
continue addressing the energy efficiency challenges facing the globe.” Leading the Networking Industry Towards Greater Energy Efficiency
Juniper Networks offers a broad range of integrated high-performance
network infrastructure products that have been designed to replace
multiple devices in today’s existing
networking environments. For example, businesses can consolidate four
or five devices (FW, VPN, Intrusion Prevention, Anti-virus, Web
filtering, etc.) into a single Juniper Networks Security Services
Gateway (SSG), reducing the physical space requirements and resulting
in a reduction of energy and cooling consumption costs, as well as
overall management expense.
The company recently introduced the T1600 - a new core router that
consumes 30 percent less power, requires 30 percent less cooling, and
takes up half the physical space of competitive platforms. In
addition, the T1600 follows Juniper’s
commitment to reusing hardware and line cards whenever possible to
reduce waste. Customers will be able to upgrade their existing T640
chassis to achieve the T1600’s 1.6 Tbps of
throughput, without needing to dispose of their existing chassis.
Juniper Networks also recently introduced the E120 –
a Broadband Services Router that can run on a standard 60amp Circuit
versus the typical 80amps of competing products, saving both energy
and the facility build-out costs associated with bringing high-amp
circuits to the racks in smaller points of presence.
Juniper also offers solutions that facilitate telecommuting, which the
company, itself, uses to reduce commute pollution and avoid the energy
costs associated with operating very small offices. Ninety percent of
Juniper’s workforce telecommutes at some
point during the year, with approximately 10 percent telecommuting on
any given day. Within emerging regions, the percentage of
telecommuters goes up to 30 percent, with Juniper provisioning home
instead of regional offices in numerous locations.
For more information on Juniper’s
Environmental Programs, please go to http://www.juniper.net/company/profile/environmental_relations/index.
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About Juniper Networks
Juniper Networks, Inc. is the leader in high-performance networking.
Juniper offers a high-performance network infrastructure that creates a
responsive and trusted environment for accelerating the deployment of
services and applications over a single network. This fuels
high-performance businesses. Additional information can be found at www.juniper.net.
Juniper Networks and the Juniper Networks logo are registered
trademarks of Juniper Networks, Inc. in the United States and other
countries. All other trademarks, service marks, registered trademarks,
or registered service marks are the property of their respective owners.
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