Over the last decade, an increasing number of businesses are undertaking initiatives to reduce their
environmental footprint and improve their ¿green¿ credentials. As information technology (IT) has permeated
most, if not all, business processes and supply chains, it offers an important means to tackle the climate
problem. On the other hand, IT managers are pressed to reduce the total cost of IT operations and run energy
efficient IT shops. Greening IT has therefore become one of the latest considerations to improve a business¿s
environmental sustainability whilst reducing the cost of IT operations. A growing number of consulting reports
speculate the benefits of greening IT for both IT vendors and mainstream businesses that use IT. While the
opportunities and potentials of Green IT might be attractive, the extent of Green IT adoption and the actual
realization of the benefits that Green IT aficionados allude to remain unknown. Indeed, unless business
organisations incorporate Green IT into their operations, the potential benefits of Green IT remain potential
and not reality. Currently, there does not appear to be a model to systematically investigate Green IT adoption.
This paper proposes such a model called the Green IT Adoption Model (GITAM). The model defines Green IT
from four distinct but interrelated perspectives. It posits that the technological, organisational and
environmental contextual variables, dynamic Green IT readiness dimensions and strong order Green IT drivers
can predict the intention and the breadth and depth of Green IT adoption.
History
Start page
658
End page
668
Total pages
11
Outlet
Proceedings of the 19th Australasian Conference on Information Systems
Editors
A. Mills, S. Huff
Name of conference
19th Australasian Conference on Information Systems