2050Today Members

UNICC – United Nations International Computing Centre

Signatory institution of the 2050Today Charter

The reason UNICC was created 50 years ago, and why we still exist, is because we continue to contribute towards finding the right group of organizations who can come together, collaborate, and make impactful digital solutions for the UN system and other international organizations. In the same vein, we want to leverage UNICC's technical expertise to collaborate with our partners and make the system better through better adoption of green technologies.

Contribution to climate action

UNICC is part of the United Nations family and is committed to several UN initiatives including environmental responsibility, gender parity, etc. As a part of the UN family, UNICC espouses the same values that the UN embraces. As a strategic partner, UNICC’s core values are unmatched and underlie our continued growth: trust, client-focus, accountability, understanding cross-cultural differences, excellence, innovation, and teamwork.

UNICC is committed to the UN-wide agree target to develop and implement an Environmental Management System by 2025, as reflected in the Strategy for Sustainability Management in the United Nations System 2020-2030.

Thematic actions

Sustainable IT

UNICC contributes to data centre and building improvements including data centre optimizations, use of solar panels and other green technologies, efficient heating/cooling, and Cloud efficiencies.

Footprint and emissions by scope

2050Today’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions measurement methodology follows the GHG Protocol. The Protocol provides standards and guidance for organizations to measure and manage climate-warming emissions. It was created in 1998 through a partnership between the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD).

According to the GHG Protocol, the distribution of emissions is done by scopes:

Scope 1 represents direct emissions linked to the consumption of fossil fuels.

Scope 2 represents indirect emissions from the generation of purchased electricity, steam, heating and cooling consumed by the reporting company.

Scope 3 includes all other indirect emissions that occur in a company’s value chain (i.e. purchased good or services, business travel, employee commuting).

The 2050Today carbon footprint takes into account the reported emissions generated by the activities of the institution over one year and is divided by categories:

Energy and water

It takes into account the amount of the consumed electricity produced and purchased by the institution. The energy consumed to heat and/or cool the institution’s building area and the consumed water are included as well.

Mobility

It takes into consideration business travels and commuting (on a survey basis).

Food

The CO2 impact of food includes the catering of the institution and individual consumption (on a survey basis) during working hours.

Purchased goods

The perimeter of purchased goods is set to a list of new office equipment, new mobility equipment (vehicles) and construction materials.

Waste

The perimeter of the waste inventory is set to waste production from facilities and internal operations of the institution

It has to be noted that the collected data of the 2050Today members resulting in each carbon footprint are not yet fully standardized and might not be entirely complete. Data collection is being progressively harmonized and improved. Therefore, direct comparisons between tCO2 / employee among institutions – be it in general or per sector – are not yet possible nor relevant.

To ensure the reliability, the accuracy and a recurrent updating of the carbon footprint assessment, 2050Today is advised by an international Carbon Footprint Scientific Committee.

Carbon Footprint

The carbon footprint is being calculated and will be published here in due course

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