Sustainability and Software?
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For instance, and I am sure that the software geeks out there know this, but the way you write software can influence the power used by the computer's processor. If you can reduce the “energy” required to execute your instructions, you can reduce the overall energy required to run a data center, therefore saving precious resources. So how does one do that? I have written and am teaching a graduate course at Boston University called “Green IT”. I am using a new book this semester called Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices, edited by San Murugesan and G.R. Gangadharan, @ 2012 John Wiley and Sons Ltd. In Chapter 2, Bob Steigerwald and Abhishek Agarwal from Intel talk about some energy saving software techniques. As an example, for DVD playback applications, “you could implement read-ahead buffering methodology and allow the optical drive to take breaks rather than continuously spinning. “ They also talk about; computational efficiency - using more efficient algorithms and multi-threading, data efficiency – effectively using cache memories, and idle efficiency and evaluating a monitoring software impact to platform power - using the PowerCfg utility in Windows7 to determine whether an application has increased the platform timing resolution, thus decreasing the amount of idle time used to reduce power consumption. Just when you thought that what you do doesn’t have any effect on greenality, you find out that using some software methodologies, designs and development tools, you can have a positive effect on reducing the energy required to process data. That is a positive effect on the environment and it reduces costs, all the while people are “doing the right thing”, plant, people, profits. * In our book, we have cover the “spectrum of green” from Green by Definition – building a wind farm, Green by Project Impact – Boston’s Big Dig, Green by Product Impact – Keurig’s K-Cups and Green General – a new software release. I just love this picture, and I realize the caption is a little small so I will explain the jist. This a a mock up of what the RAND Corporation thought the home computer might look like in 2004. Looks like this was published in the 1950's. |
Dream Home - Green Home
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What caught my attention when watching the introduction to this year’s Dream Home was the fact that they constantly mentioned their project manager and, by supposition, his or her significant contributions to the project, and the fact that it is in a project intended to be truly sustainable, considering the triple bottom line. While the emphasis is on nature, there are aspects of energy efficiency and comfort. The house is in the Kiawah Island Resort, South Carolina. It is a barrier island and according to Kiawah Island Associates“…it will likely be the last large barrier island on the east coast to be privately developed. Containing about 10,000 acres, the Island enjoys a moderate climate, breathtaking natural beauty, controlled accessibility, and the professional and financial resources necessary to create both a resort and year-round residential community without compromise or parallel.” So this resort is not inexpensive, and the lessons learned here can go a long way to helping developers and builders understand the concepts of green building and, perhaps, find less expensive alternatives. Part of the expense, here, is the property. For instance, the philosophy of the Kiawah Island Associates is as follow: “Over the years of its stewardship as the Island’s developer, Kiawah Resort Associates has been dedicated to preserving a unique and ecologically sensitive community. The architectural design and construction philosophy of the Company maintains that homes should generally be unobtrusive in form and color in order to complement their natural setting. No particular period, style, foreign or geographic influence, or traditional approach is specifically endorsed or discouraged. The chief concern is that the residential community be basically homogeneous with certain areas having more architectural diversity than others. This philosophy suggests that each home be treated not as an individual creation or architectural entity arbitrarily placed on its site, but rather as a carefully planned addition to the natural setting which embraces the site and becomes one with it. Consequently, design solutions should extend beyond the building walls to include the entire site, varying in design to complement and enhance their natural surroundings. Designs and colors appropriate for the mottled shade of forest areas might be inappropriate for open or un-wooded sites. Colors and textures of exterior building materials should be compatible with the light reflecting properties of the natural elements such as tree bark, surrounding trees and shrubs, pine needles, natural grasses, and other vegetation.” There is an extensive guideline (5+meg) that can be a helpful planning document for anyone to use. Some of the sustainability techniques being used is green landscaping; using native plants, butterfly attracting bushes and also takes into consideration the area wildlife. Forest Stewardship Council certified wood is used in the project. According to Jason Shuey, Rainforest Alliance, “Another myth is that FSC-certified products cost much more, sometimes more than twice as much, as wood products that are not FSC-certified. Often contractors and/or pro-dealers who do not want to put in the extra effort to source FSC-certified products will significantly mark up the quote of the products that are FSC-certified to sway the project manager toward not going with the FSC-certified products. Most contractors also like to deal with pro-dealers that they know and are comfortable with. So if these suppliers do not wish to locate and sell FSC-certified products to their contractors at a reasonable cost then the contractor needs to use the resources available to find and purchase FSC-certified materials from another FSC-certified supplier.” One other thing to note (among lots of things), is “cellular pvc siding” used on the home. “Polyvinyl chloride is the plastic used to make the white drain pipes used in household plumbing. But when the molten plastic is whipped with air and then extruded into building materials, it makes a terrific substitute for exterior wood. HGTV Dream Home 2013 is clad in PVC trim and wall shingles. Each shingle boasts a distinct faux grain pattern and can be cut and nailed in place using the same techniques and tools as wood. But the plastic won’t absorb moisture, rot or host termites. So like every part of this house, siding will withstand the harsh island elements for an extended period of time.” By the way, the house has earned a Platinum LEED Certified rating. That means that the house achieved the highest rating using the following criteria; sustainable sites, water efficiency, energy & atmosphere, materials and resources, indoor environmental quality and innovation is operations.
I did find this about the benefits of a LEED certified home:
Looks a little (a lot) like the triple-bottom line to me. |
A new baseline
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We have based our company on the intersection of sustainability and project management. And we're hopeless project management professionals who for better or worse see almost everything through a PM's eyes. Thats' why it was such a surprise this morning - I literally had to rub my eyes - when I saw what looked like an S-curve right under the top, front-page headline story of the Boston Globe. We're going to provide that graphic for you below to look at, download, and consider. But let's start with a mini-lesson on S-curves for our more casual readers. For this, we turn to Max Wideman's outstanding resource and glossaries of PM, where we can findthat an S-curve is: "A display of cumulative costs, labor hours or other quantities plotted against time. The name derives from the S-like shape of the curve, flatter at the beginning and end and steeper in the middle, which is typical of most projects. The beginning represents a slow, deliberate but accelerating start, while the end represents a deceleration as the work runs out." It all looks like this:
As a project proceeds, we track our progress against this S-curve. The planned progress is called the baseline. Changes in scope, budget, schedule - any of these must be reflected by formal integrated change control, which (as the picture above shows) involves acknowledging that change and creating a new baseline. Great! Lovely. Now what the bleep does that have to do with the picture on the front of the Boston Globe? Well, there is a connection. Turns out, the chart is not cumulative spend of resources but rather temperature from January through December for decades (of Boston data), plotted to show the 'normal' baseline of that pattern and also to show that 2012 was the Boston's (and the USA's) warmest on record. So although the S-shaped curve's shape was only a bit of a bizzare coincidence (it had to do with the natrural fact that temperatures in the USA go up from January to December in that particular pattern), the idea of it being a representation of an old baselie and a new baseline was actually seen properly through my tired eyes. In fact, the last line of the article sums it up well: It was “a huge exclamation point,’’ said Deke Arndt, chief of the climate monitoring branch at Climatic Data Center. “This is consistent with what we would expect in a warming world.’’ So, just as we have to re-baseline a project when we face reality and acknowlege triggered risks, issues, scope change, and so on, it appears that we have to acknowledge (and we would assert act on) factual information presented to us as PMs - or in this case, folks who happen to live on Earth. We're both. Some of the 'new-baseliney' facts from the article:
Have a look at the graphic. Are you a project management nut like me? Do you see an S-Curve there? And...once you realize that it isn't, do you get a feeling, like we do, that this is even more ominous than a project going bust? It's more like an eco-system giving us a 'risk trigger' that something is quite wrong? At least consider that possibility.
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Red State, Blue State, Green World, Brown World
Categories:
Activism
Categories: Activism
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Well, here in the US, we have just ended the year with a hearty debate on the so-called "fiscal cliff", and head into 2013 with not too much solved, mostly just delayed and deferred. The cartoon above, from Pulitzer Prize winner Thomas Toles, shows our view. We, as a large rock (i.e. Earth), have 'other fish to fry'. That's not to say that the financial problems of the US or for that matter, the world, are not important. They are. But as the drawing aptly shows - with comic exaggeration and irony - we, as citizens of any state or - for that matter, any country - have world-wide problems that we as project managers can help solve. Recently, one of the LinkedIn groups we participate in had a survey, asking people to summarize Project Management in 3 words. Hundreds of people chimed in. There were some good ones:
..and so on. Our contribution was: Ideas Into Reality That's what we are all about as project managers. We take an idea and make it real. We are at that precious intersection of Strategy and Operations. Which means that we are the ones who can help make a browning world into a greener one - by taking on projects which are oriented towards sustainability, or by molding our existing projects to incorporate sustainability (or both). Our point in this post: it shouldn't matter where you are in the world. It shouldn't matter where you lean politically. You, as a project manager can help make a difference. Make it a resolution to stay tuned to this blog and others like it (http://earthpm.com, for one). Join the PMI Global Sustainabiity CoP. Be aware that beyond the fiscal cliff is a much larger fissure, loaded with both threat and opportunity. Have a healthy, safe, and prosperous 2013! |
Winding down 2012 and winding up 2013
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English is a quirky language. Winding - usually pronounced "wine-ding" - is associated with the winding of a clock, or in the case of our post title, winding down, as in closing up and relaxing a project (or a year). We intend for the title to have a double meaning. We want you to think of wind as in gust or breeze. So with that in mind, we're talking about the ups and downs of wind power, as well as using this post as a way to close out 2012 and look forward to 2013. Our attention was drawn today by a very nice editorial by Derrick Z. Jackson in today's Boston Globe. In the article, Jackson laments that the US will be facing the "Fiscal Cliff" and that production tax credits will be on the chopping block. While Europe moves ahead full blast (pun intended), the American Wind Energy Association is actually predicting a loss of 37,000 jobs without the extension of the tax credits - and this is on top of the 10,000 jobs lost from a peak of 85,000 three years ago. Let's have a look at some of the comparative statistics. While Jackson's article did not have graphics representing the figures, we couldn't help ourselves and created some of the world's finest graphics from the data in the article. Mainly, these speak for themselves. Look at the investment in the UK between now and 2020. And have a look below at the comparative percentage of the power produced by wind in Europe and in the USA - and the commensurate project and job creation that goes along with it.
It's interesting (at least for us) to note the comments by project managers in Jackson's editorial. Project manager Ann Pembroke, from Normandeau Associates of Befrord, NH, said, "It's so disappointing to be surrounded by the number of visionaries here who are deicated to getting this industry going in the US but can't because of divisiveness". Stuart Clough, of the British-based APEM, said, "Wind will be stillborn. Many companies will give up on the US". That's a dreary prediction. Perhaps we can make it a resolution as project managers to push for more wind power and to end the divisiveness. We suggest that you start by becoming informed. Read Jackson's entire article. Understand more about wind power and the promise it has both as a renewable source of energy and an engine for more projects (and more PM jobs). We'll end with the ending of Jackson's editorial:
"For the US wind industry, the question is this: Will Obama's reelection and whichever fiscal plan eventually emerges in Washington keep the turbines spinning - or will the future of energy whirl right on past us?" |






Whether it is feedback from our website or feedback after a presentation, we’ve often heard “I’m a code writer or a software developer, how could my project be 'green general*.' There are no aspects of sustainability that I can affect with my code.” Our answer is - you’d be surprised how much you, as a programmer, can affect sustainability or greenality (the degree to which an organization has considered environmental (green) factors that affect its projects during the entire life cycle and beyond).
It seems that everyone these days are going “green.” Even HGTV, with their new “Dream Home”, “Green Home” 2013 sweepstakes, is going with increased sustainability. Yes, I admit, I am an HGTV watcher (at times). Just like 





