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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cappelle, Jona, Van der Perre, Liesbet, Fitzgerald, Emma, Ravyts, Simon, Gajda, Weronika, De Smedt, Valentijn, Cox, Bert, Callebaut, Gilles
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.20706
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author Cappelle, Jona
Van der Perre, Liesbet
Fitzgerald, Emma
Ravyts, Simon
Gajda, Weronika
De Smedt, Valentijn
Cox, Bert
Callebaut, Gilles
author_facet Cappelle, Jona
Van der Perre, Liesbet
Fitzgerald, Emma
Ravyts, Simon
Gajda, Weronika
De Smedt, Valentijn
Cox, Bert
Callebaut, Gilles
contents The Internet of Things (IoT) can support the evolution towards a digital and green future. However, the introduction of the technology clearly has in itself a direct adverse ecological impact. This paper assesses this impact at both the IoT-node and at the network side. For the nodes, we show that the electronics production of devices comes with a carbon footprint that can be much higher than during operation phase. We highlight that the inclusion of IoT support in existing cellular networks comes with a significant ecological penalty, raising overall energy consumption by more than 15%. These results call for novel design approaches for the nodes and for early consideration of the support for IoT in future networks. Raising the 'Vehicle or bandit?' question on the nature of IoT in the broader sense of sustainability, we illustrate the need for multidisciplinary cooperation to steer applications in desirable directions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2405_20706
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle IoT on the Road to Sustainability: Vehicle or Bandit?
Cappelle, Jona
Van der Perre, Liesbet
Fitzgerald, Emma
Ravyts, Simon
Gajda, Weronika
De Smedt, Valentijn
Cox, Bert
Callebaut, Gilles
Signal Processing
The Internet of Things (IoT) can support the evolution towards a digital and green future. However, the introduction of the technology clearly has in itself a direct adverse ecological impact. This paper assesses this impact at both the IoT-node and at the network side. For the nodes, we show that the electronics production of devices comes with a carbon footprint that can be much higher than during operation phase. We highlight that the inclusion of IoT support in existing cellular networks comes with a significant ecological penalty, raising overall energy consumption by more than 15%. These results call for novel design approaches for the nodes and for early consideration of the support for IoT in future networks. Raising the 'Vehicle or bandit?' question on the nature of IoT in the broader sense of sustainability, we illustrate the need for multidisciplinary cooperation to steer applications in desirable directions.
title IoT on the Road to Sustainability: Vehicle or Bandit?
topic Signal Processing
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.20706