Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5050569 Ecological Economics 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article is in support of the development of an ecological economic framework. It discusses, from an interdisciplinary perspective, the increasing use of green IT and their applications (IT for green). IT and sustainable development have had a concomitant rise and reach. The future world emerging from their respective interpretations enables, in both cases, a shift from today's questionable industrial capitalism towards post-industrial capitalism. This paper addresses the following questions: What is known about green IT and IT for green? Are smart solutions (buildings, energy grids, transport) always beneficial to an ecological economy? And, if so, in what ways? In the first part of this article, we analyse the economic, social and environmental impact of IT and argue for the need for green applications of green IT in order to achieve sustainable outcomes. The second part focuses on the managerial dimension of eco-innovation theory and presents one of the distinctive features of green applications of green IT: the collective organisation of innovation. A typology of eco-innovation aimed at reconciling IT development and green growth is then proposed explicitly addressing four kinds of changes towards sustainable development: technological, social, institutional and organisational innovation.

► We examine what is known on Green IT and IT for green and how they could impact sustainable development. ► Depends on these two categories of eco innovations, we show how smart solutions (buildings, energy networks) could reconcile IT development and green growth. The theoretical framework is deliberately borrowed from the field of ecological economics with the explicit inclusion of three types of changes enabling sustainable development in relation to the dissemination of IT: technological, organisational and institutional. ► We model a typology of eco innovations inspired from a combination between green IT and IT for green. We show two cases studies and assess the proposed criteria of this typology with a managerial approach.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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