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Seven Grams CO2 per Google Search? Not True or Relevant, but Fun To Repeat

by Mark Ontkush, Boston, Massachusetts, USA on 01.13.09
Science & Technology

copper kettle
Image from One of a Kind Antiques

Many of us will remember the whole seven grams of CO2, kettle of tea thing with Google, and guess that it probably isn't quite right; the dude that supposedly said it now supposedly denies it, apparently blaming it on London Times ax grinding against Google. At this point, who really knows what's going on - maybe TechNewsWorld has an ax to grind for the Times too - but one thing is for sure; all day today, the entire audience following this story will get their pleasures from figuring it out. And that, environmentally, is 100% exactly the problem.

Well, I actually I lied about that - it's not 100% of the problem, only part of it, but I wanted you to click through to continue reading; ironically, perhaps that's 'part of the problem' too! At this point, you are probably demanding some sense out of this article; ok, here's the sense.

Grams of CO2 Per Google Search
Let's start with the numbers themselves; the initial claim was that the average Google search emits 7 grams of carbon dioxide; this figure immediately gets pasted all over the Internet. Terrific! Now we know! Invariably, other comparative figures are included in these stories as well, like boiling a kettle or water to make tea, or a book, or a cheeseburger, or a car. One would suppose these numbers are used to provide some sort of perspective or 'level playing field'.

What really needed to happen is that someone should have taken a look at that 7 gram figure and determined if it was realistic. Few considered this; gladly, Nick Carr did on Rough Type, and it turns out he was probably right:

If we assume that Google processes a billion searches a day worldwide (a reasonable guesstimate), that means that, according to Wissner-Gross's numbers, those searches are producing 7 billion grams of carbon dioxide. Over the course of a year, that comes out to 2,555 billion grams. That equals, according to my rough and not altogether reliable arithmetic, 2.6 billion kilograms, or 2.6 million metric tons. I don't know enough about CO2 emissions to know whether that's a reasonable number. But somebody out there must know if it's a reasonable number.

Note that Carr doesn't make a whole lot of conclusions, just that 2.6 million metric tons of CO2 seems like a pretty fantastic number. Turns out that it appears that it was - the Google correction to the story puts each search at about 0.2 grams, 35 times less. So lesson one - a simple math check on any environmental statistic can add a lot of perspective.

On Context and Validity
After we get by this hubbub of grams per search, we need to examine what the context of these figures; what do the number mean? Contextually, a few authors dug up some interesting items, such as the purported author has his own company which provides eco-labelling for websites. Also, there is the fact that Google's number is not verified either, but it clearly benefits them to report something low. Carr phrases this as such:

Google is in something of a moral quandary here. It's dedicated to energy efficiency, but it's also dedicated to getting people to spend as much time using the Net, and their computers, as possible. (That's the very core of its ad-based business model.) The company hasn't disclosed its electricity consumption. It says that such details of its operations are competitive secrets. I'm sure that's true. I'm also sure it's true that Google doesn't particularly want us to focus too closely on its energy use or, for that matter, on the environmental implications of our own Internet use.

Aha! Yes, yes; the framework is shaping up. So there are a few players here - on one hand we have Google, a huge enterprise that consumes a lot of electricity to conduct business; we have an entrepreneur of a green start-up who benefits from media coverage; and we have the London Times, who may be grinding axes, and is certainly not checking facts too well. And then, most importantly we have us, who read, blog, twitter, and gobble all this stuff down on a daily basis.

What to Do
You will certainly draw your own conclusions about this little meme; it is possible you might take some kind of action as well. Here's what I'm going to do:

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