TeamViewer’s remote connectivity solutions have a substantial positive environmental impact, according to a recently finalised study conducted by Five Glaciers Consulting and critically reviewed by TÜV SÜD. The CO2-avoidance-study revealed that TeamViewer users and customers avoided between 15.6 and 44.8 million tons of CO2 emissions in 2022 alone, mainly by reducing the need for travel through remote connections. To narrow down the savings of between 15.6 and 44.8 million tons of CO2, a scenario was calculated in consultation with internal and external experts based on realistic travel assumptions regarding, for example, the number of travellers or the chosen mode of transport. This results in an avoidance of around 41 million tons of CO2 in 2022. The total amount of avoided emissions corresponds to, for example:
- approximately 42,000 roundtrip flights from London to Tokyo in a Boeing 777-300ER,
- approximately 10 times the emissions of the waste management sector (1) in Germany or
- the stored CO2 in approximately 147,000 hectares of US forest, which is an area of about 25 times the size of Manhattan.
The study was based on TeamViewer’s connection data of 2022, a customer and user survey with around 850 qualified participants as well as internal and external interviews with selected TeamViewer experts and customers to validate the data from the survey.
Alexander Gührer, director, sustainability and procurement, TeamViewer, said, “TeamViewer solutions have become instrumental in facilitating remote access, support, and control across various industries.
“By enabling users to troubleshoot IT equipment, steer machinery, and provide remote assistance, TeamViewer helps to significantly avoid carbon emissions associated with travel. At the same time, we ensure that these remote connections are secure, and that critical data is protected.”
In addition, TeamViewer is continuously working on reducing its own emissions to reach the net-zero target by 2040 and to reduce Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 50 per cent by 2030, based on a 2021 baseline.
Alexander Gührer, said, “In addition to empowering users and customers to avoid carbon emissions, we are constantly working on minimising our own environmental impact.
“We are committed to driving sustainable practices across our operations every day.”
For more information about TeamViewer’s sustainability initiatives and the CO2-avoidance-study, please visit https://www.teamviewer.com/en-au/special/2023-co2-study/
About TeamViewer
TeamViewer is a leading global technology company that provides a connectivity platform to remotely access, control, manage, monitor, and repair devices of any kind – from laptops and mobile phones to industrial machines and robots. Although TeamViewer is free of charge for private use, it has more than 630,000 subscribers and enables companies of all sizes and from all industries to digitalise their business-critical processes through seamless connectivity. Against the backdrop of global megatrends like device proliferation, automation and new work, TeamViewer proactively shapes digital transformation and continuously innovates in the fields of augmented reality, Internet of Things and artificial intelligence. Since the company’s foundation in 2005, TeamViewer’s software has been installed on more than 2.5 billion devices around the world. The company is headquartered in Goppingen, Germany, and employs more than 1,400 people globally. In 2023, TeamViewer achieved a revenue of around EUR 627 million. TeamViewer SE (TMV) is listed at Frankfurt Stock Exchange and belongs to the MDAX. Further information can be found at www.teamviewer.com.
Reference
(1) Emissions from waste disposal, biological waste treatment (composting, fermentation), waste incineration, wastewater treatment and mechanical-biological waste treatment.