C-Lock = IBM & GREEN CERT TECHNOLOGYGreenCert catching attention of IT professionals
Here is a new Greencert article that was published in enterprise network and servers publication:
https://www.enterprisenetworksandservers.com/monthly/art.php?3545
The article gives you a better idea of just how complex the Evergreen/C-Lock Greencert software is, and the potential market for this unique product.
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IBM Software Powers Greenhouse Gas Meter
IBM, Enterprise Information Management Inc. (EIM), and Evergreen Energy Inc. have announced a greenhouse gas meter called GreenCert developed on IBM Websphere Portal-based software, which can calculate carbon reductions across multiple industries and devices.
The absence of such compliance tools is cited as inhibiting the investment in and growth of the potentially $30 billion global carbon market, according to a World Bank report.
GreenCert provides an automated software tool to gauge and document greenhouse gas management efforts and can transform this data into Certified Carbon Emissions Reduction Credits (CCERC). This greenhouse gas meter solution is a collaborative project among IBM Business Partner Enterprise Information Management, Inc. (EIM), Evergreen Energy Inc. and its subsidiary, C-Lock Technology Inc. (C-Lock).
The technology extends the global greenhouse gas reduction trading market to numerous sectors including power, agriculture, government and financial services. It can easily be deployed throughout power plants, cement factories, steel factories and commercial buildings, measuring outputs of greenhouse gases from florescent lights, printers and other sources of energy output.
GreenCert offers a standard, repeatable methodology for efficiently collecting and manipulating large volumes of information and calculating and documenting emissions reductions, a process which has typically relied on highly specialized, labor and transaction intensive methods. Previously, organizations had to rely upon customized approaches to measuring emission reductions before a credit could be monetized and traded.
Private and public organizations around the world are facing a growing need to acquire new, cost-effective tools to manage, quantify, analyze and report on their greenhouse gas footprint. At the same time, investors and stake-holders are increasingly demanding full accounting of greenhouse gas-related liabilities and assets. Energy use (as measured by kilowatt-hours or kWh) is a critical piece of data for the calculation of emissions. Converting emission reduction to Certified Carbon Emission Reduction Credits (CCERC) opens a previously untapped revenue source. CCERCs are valued between $3.00 and $8.00 per metric ton, the measurement used to quantify greenhouse gases (1 ton equals 1,000 kilograms or 2,205 pounds).
The overall value of the global aggregated carbon markets was over $10 billion in 2005, the last full year for which data is available, with the potential to grow by some as high as $30 billion for 2006, according to the World Bank report: State and Trends of the Carbon Market 2006. "Reducing climate change risk and promoting investment in clean energy systems is a long-term venture requiring billions of dollars of annual investment…" the report states. "In order for the (carbon) market to generate sustainable long-term capital at the scale required, the market needs a strong compliance system, more transparent and credible processes about formulating and releasing emissions data, and clear signals about future policy direction."
The full World Bank report can be found at: https://carbonfinance.org/ docs/ StateoftheCarbonMarket2006.pdf
To meet this growing business opportunity, companies have spent billions trying to come up with custom solutions that are expensive, and still fall short of the scale demanded by the climate change challenge. With the joint software effort, companies will have a global and high-volume tool for stepped-up greenhouse gas measurement. GreenCert aims to reliably quantify what is being traded, allows important information to be shared among multiple organizations and authorized users, and supports emerging ecological impact standards and legislation.
To learn more about the specific capabilities of this tool, see: www.c-locktech.com.
GreenCert has specific industry models, as in agriculture, that can use base data from the farmers who manage the land and compute the amount of carbon sequestered in the soil over time and be used for carbon emission reduction credits. Energy companies can use sensor data from power plants and other facilities to compute and verify carbon emission reductions.
The GreenCert infrastructure was designed and built by EIM and is based on a Services Oriented Architecture (SOA) that uses 100 percent IBM Software. The IBM technologies that make up the system include Websphere Portal, Lotus Forms, DB2 Universal Database, Content Manager, Records Manager, WebSphere Process Server and WebSphere Business Process Management software. IBM's software and database capabilities enable the development of a robust business process application which ensures the security, traceability, and integrity of the raw data and the resulting CCERCs.
GreenCert will be available from C-Lock in the first half of 2008. Pricing will be made public at availability. The GreenCert application is available now as a trial beta at: www.c-locktech.com. ENS
This article appears in the February 2008 issue of Enterprise Networks & Servers
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