Sustainable solutions have the potential to reap huge energy savings across video entertainment industry
2025年1月22日 - 6:00PM
The overall demand for more entertainment and video communication
services has highlighted the need for more sustainable solutions
across the industry. According to a paper released today by
InterDigital, Inc. (NASDAQ: IDCC), a mobile and video technology
research and development company, and written by leading market
research firm Futuresource, the video industry is rapidly emerging
as a major emitter of greenhouse gas. Solutions like Pixel Value
Reduction (PVR) can reap significant energy savings, especially
around significant TV events such as the Olympics.
The report, “Spotlight on Sustainability: Towards a greener TV
and video value chain,” analyzes the carbon footprint created by
the video entertainment industry, from the point of production to
delivery, and consumption. The paper also examines emerging
solutions to mitigate the environmental impact across the video
value chain.
One of the biggest challenges for the industry comes from Scope
3 emissions, which arise from indirect sources such as travel,
accommodation, catering, and post-production. However, strides are
being made in various areas:
- IP-based remote virtual production,
for example, could lower the industry's carbon footprint by
6x less CO2 than on-site methods.
- TVs remain the most energy-intensive
devices, but investments in AI and brightness-adjustment
technologies mean that energy consumption of TVs are set to decline
by 15% by 2028.
- Overall energy consumption for video
entertainment devices – which includes TVs, set-top boxes, media
streamers, gaming consoles, smartphones, and tablets – has declined
by 17% since 2020, with another 12%
reduction expected by 2028, as older devices are replaced
with more energy-efficient alternatives.
InterDigital leads the industry in developing cutting-edge video
compression standards and PVR technology to achieve lower energy
consumption on a device without sacrificing the quality of the
video content and experience. If PVR technology was applied to
devices showing the recent Paris Olympics, roughly 48 million kWh
of energy could have been saved, which is the equivalent of fueling
4,000 US homes for a year.
“While everyone is aware of the contributions the airline
industry makes to greenhouse gas emissions–accounting for 2% of all
global greenhouse emissions per year–what isn’t common knowledge is
the impact the TV and video streaming industry has. Which is in
fact, double the emissions from the airline industry.”
“It is the responsibility of the entire industry to make changes
that will improve the sustainability of the TV and video sector,”
said Lionel Oisel, InterDigital’s Head of Video Labs. “While change
is being made, more can and should be done. Technologies like PVR
have the potential to make significant energy savings, even when
applied to special events like the Olympics. If this was applied
universally, the benefits could be huge, and a game changer for the
industry.”
Cost savings and need for next-generation technologies to meet
changing audience demands will drive sustainability strategies for
TV and video companies. The research highlights several ways in
which the industry is impacting the environment:
- Video as a proportion of all
internet traffic continues to rise, with industry estimates placing
at 80% of total traffic impacting the CO2 output from data
centers.
- Since 2023, each hour of film
production has equated to an average of 16.6 tCO2e of carbon,
equivalent to the energy consumption of two homes per annum.
- In 2024, an estimated 54 MtCO2e of
emissions were generated from TVs: this is roughly equivalent to
the annual greenhouse gas emissions of 11.7 million passenger
vehicles.
- Futuresource report that there are
now 858 million 4K TVs installed in homes, yet the emissions
generated per hour from 4K TVs are around 1.7x that of a 1080 HD
TV.
- Major sporting events have a
significant impact on the environment: this year’s Paris Olympics
had an estimated media carbon footprint of 602.8 million tons, with
an estimated 1.25 TWh of electricity consumed as a result of
streaming across televisions, mobile phones and laptops.
To read the complete report, “Spotlight on Sustainability:
Towards a greener TV and video value chain,” please click here.
About InterDigital®InterDigital is a global
research and development company focused primarily on wireless,
video, artificial intelligence (“AI”), and related technologies. We
design and develop foundational technologies that enable connected,
immersive experiences in a broad range of communications and
entertainment products and services. We license our innovations
worldwide to companies providing such products and services,
including makers of wireless communications devices, consumer
electronics, IoT devices, cars and other motor vehicles, and
providers of cloud-based services such as video streaming. As a
leader in wireless technology, our engineers have designed and
developed a wide range of innovations that are used in wireless
products and networks, from the earliest digital cellular systems
to 5G and today’s most advanced Wi-Fi technologies. We are also a
leader in video processing and video encoding/decoding technology,
with a significant AI research effort that intersects with both
wireless and video technologies. Founded in 1972, InterDigital is
listed on Nasdaq.
InterDigital is a registered trademark of InterDigital, Inc.
For more information, visit: www.interdigital.com.
InterDigital Contact:Roya StephensEmail:
Roya.Stephens@InterDigital.com +1 (202) 349-1714
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