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Carbon Footprint of Music Downloads vs Buying CD's

21 August 2009

A recent white paper reported on in Environmental Leader compared the carbon footprint and energy usage associated with various forms of music delivery, from CDs sold at retail to CDs sold on the Internet to simple downloads.

It was not surprising that the downloads have the least environmental impact.

Purchasing music digitally reduced CO2 emissions associated with delivering music to consumers by 40-80 percent, as compared to buying a CD at retail.

The research took into account all facets, from packaging to type of shipping involved.

The white paper, “The Energy and Climate Change Impacts of Different Music Delivery Methods,” was sponsored by Microsoft and Intel. The report was prepared by the Department of Civil Engineering and Environmental Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at Stanford University.

By Tony Hall

User comments

Josh Millen @ 9th October 2009 11:31 PM
Kudos for the carbon aspect but a big bummer about compressed sound quality. When they can figure out how to get 24bit 196khz into 5 MEG I'll be excited! Curent MP3 qaulity is ear candy - suited for the top 40 stuff.
Peter Headley @ 21st August 2009 10:13 PM
There is now no reason to by cd's in plastic cases as most music stores have kiosks to download music directly to your music player or usb! Imagine how much waste and energy we could reduce by banning packaging on all dvd's and cd's!!!
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