To cut your email carbon foot print there are two very easy steps two which we can all take now. First, turn off all new email and associated social media notifications. Second, use rules to move to Junk automatically any unwanted emails. These are contained in a letter in reply to an an article in The Financial Times.
Click here to read more.
Tags: Business email management to reduce CO2, CO2 emissions, email carbon footprint, Email CO2 emissions, Email Overload and CO2, Reduce your email carbon foot print
Don’t you just love to hate email? Email overload is the curse of most business organisations and now it has come in for more abuse. As the UK prepares to host UN COP26, the Government has suddenly woken up to the fact that email overload is bad for our health in more ways than one. It is disasterous for our CO2 emissions.
Here are to tips to reduce the impact of email overload on your well-being and carbon foorprint.
Click here, to download the full article,recently published in Newsquest’s Capital Business Magazine.
Tags: Business email management to reduce CO2, CO2 emissions, email overload, Reduce your email carbon foot print, Top tips to reduce email overload and CO2
Reducing your carbon footrpint resulting from email overload is a two way battle between users and providers such as Google and Microsoft. The impact of excess emails on CO2 emissions is something many of us have been commenting on for over a decade, but it is not the individual users who are to blame. Click here to read the full letter in the FT.
Click here for five easy ways as individuals which can help reduce your carbon footprint.
Tags: Carbon footprint, CO2 emissions, email overload, Google, Microsoft