Reduce your carbon footprint using virtual worlds

One of Credit Agricole\'s training rooms in Second Life (photo courtesy of Stonefield Inworld)

Virtual Worlds such as Second Life are largely dismissed as trivial and a waste of time by many people (myself included until recently!).

However a recent conversation with Pierre-Olivier Carles changed all that for me. Pierre is the co-founder and CEO of Stonefield Inworld - a company which builds things for people in virtual worlds.

For example, the photo above is a training room for the French banking group Crédit Agricole. According to their Wikipedia entry, Crédit Agricole are the 8th largest bank in the world! Stonefield have purpose built training rooms for Crédit Agricole on the bank’s private island in Second Life.

In a pilot program rolled out for a small part of the group, Crédit Agricole expect to save between €200,000 and €300,000 this year on travel expenses alone by holding training sessions in-world. If this is rolled out to the group, annual savings would be in the order of €5-€6m. I’m not sure what that is in terms of reduced CO2 emissions but you can take it that it is a pretty big number!

And that is just in travel expenses. When companies start to be taxed for their carbon emissions, the savings from holding in-world training will be even greater.

Of course, the success of something like this is all in the execution and from talking to Pierre-Olivier, Stonefield seem to have nailed it. They have audio (for the presenter), video, slideware, and whiteboards in the training room. They take ‘coffee’ breaks to allow for the networking which happens in ‘real’ training as well as the opportunities for one-on-one with the trainer (”what you said in there is all very well in theory but in the case of our org…”).

The trainees can even give feedback on their understanding of the topic by migrating to the green side of the room to indicate all is going well or moving to the red side to signal that they are falling behind. As someone who gives talks and has done training, this kind of trainee feedback is invaluable to the successful running of a class.

Then there is the added benefits to the trainee of not having to worry about getting through security, catching that plane, lost luggage, traffic jams, breakdowns or worse. Does anyone have any statistics on the number of employees lost to work-related travel accidents annually?

With travel making up such a large part of our global CO2 emissions and companies increasing requirements to upskill their employees on an ongoing basis, initiatives like this are going to be vital for cost efficiencies and reduced carbon footprints.

3 Comments

  1. Posted May 15, 2008 at 6:56 am | Permalink

    Thanks for your time, Tom. Amazing things are now made with virtual worlds, on many topics such as e-Commerce, education, collaborative work…

    We’ll launch a great project about sustainable development in a near future. I’ll tell you more as soon as possible.

    PS : As I guess your readers are mainly english speaking smart people, we’ve an english version of Stonfield InWorld’s blog just here :
    http://virtual-worlds.stonfield-inworld.com

  2. Posted June 8, 2008 at 11:50 am | Permalink

    Tom, I would like to setup a conference on Demand Response. This is a very important but poorly understood technical concept that will have a huge impact in the Irish context.

    Could such a conference be held virtually and would the experience be good enough for attendees to benefit?

    The key researchers and therefore best available speakers are located on the west coast of the USA. A virtual conference would be the easiest(and most carbon efficient) way to hold such an event. Would it work?

  3. Tom Raftery
    Posted June 9, 2008 at 7:33 am | Permalink

    To be honest Jerry, I doubt it would work, unfortunately.

    Why do I say that? Well, two reasone come to mind:
    1. You need a proper virtual conference space built to do this - now perhaps Stonefield or a similar co. might do this as part of a sponsorship deal and that would sort that one but the second reason
    2. is that there is very low general awareness of virtual worlds, never mind the use of them as virtual conference venues.

    I guess it depends on who your target audience for the conference is. If it is Joe Consumer, then it would be very difficult but if your audience is a more tightly focussed group, they could be educated on the virtual conference idea and it might work.

3 Trackbacks

  1. […] Lower (Carbon) Footprint » Reduce your carbon footprint using virtual worlds - Credit Agricole is one of several French (and Spanish) banks innovating to save money. […]

  2. […] from LowerFootprint.com Posted by Tom Raftery on Monday, May 12, 2008, at 4:38 pm, and filed under travel. Follow any […]

  3. […] carbone? C’est l’expérience que tente en ce moment le Crédit Agricole, rapporte Tom Raftery, citant la société française Stonefield Inworld qui accompagne ce projet. La banque a donc fait […]

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