This
is a post on the issues that are and are not reckoned when an office shifts. The
focus is not on any one company but the general trend. In Delhi, it is for
companies to get out of Delhi, to Gurgaon or Noida, preferably the former, the
urban expanse that is deluging millions of column inches and consuming megabytes
in the media.
The
focus is on what is not reckoned. From the title it must be clear it is about
environmental consequences. But, the focus will sharpen only gradually.
Let
us take a fictitious company that was operating from that glorified slum called
Nehru Place. The company grew up in Nehru Place but it had become too big, and
also too prestigious, to stay at home. So, it flew the coop to, where else,
Gurgaon, to be in a metaphoric gated corporate community, abutting the
international airport.
In
Nehru Place, the company was somewhat scattered, occupying many floors in three
buildings in chicken wire meshes, the employees forced to mingle with the less
worthies of Indian society. All this changed in Gurgaon. It now occupies two
floors of one of those ubiquitous, apparently exclusive towers (not taller
than, say, 25 m).
The
building is centrally air-conditioned. Has the thermal load of the company
increased or decreased due to this shift? I would not hazard a guess, but it is
more than likely that the power load has decreased, given the frequent brown-outs,
black-outs in Gurgaon! After all, the company shifted from a glorified slum to
a glorified village. In slums one pilfers power but in a village one can hardly
exercise that option.
The
available alternative is back-up generation, captive diesel generation (that
sounded more impressive than the run-of-the-mill diesel generators, I hope).
Effect on carbon emissions? Do not know.
In
Nehru Place, the office must have been cooled to cater to the fancies of the
occupants of various offices. You are at the top of the heap, you get two split
units; a step below, it is one split unit; a step lower, it is a window unit
and on down the line. This is inefficient from power consumption point of view.
It is for these complexities, reckoning the shift in power consumption efficiency,
reckoned environmentally, is not very easy and I give up.
In
Gurgaon, everyone must be confined to his or her gilded cubicle, even in the
open architecture set up. What does it do to the environment? Ironically, noise
pollution is reduced, the model says! If you shouted, you will be heard not by
ten people – as it would have been in Nehru Place – but by tens of that many
here. People must be talking in whispers then. This is good, on the
environmental scale.
The
office also must have – whether brought in kicking and screaming or not – accepted
a certain level of reduced paper consumption. The trees-saved calculations are
beyond this writer’s capabilities. But, qualitatively, it may be simply asserted
that trees are being saved.
But,
I come to the most crucial issue – transport. Let us assume that the company,
when anchored at Nehru Place, was indifferent to environment. This can be
inferred from the fact that perhaps in a skewed understanding of incentivizing
people, the company offered graded commuting allowance to its employees. The
skew is not in the gradation but in the parameters used to grade. If you used
public transport, you got a certain amount. But, if you owned a two-wheeler
(petrol driven), you got more than twice that amount; for a four-wheeler, the
factor was four. Geometric series. Note that, you merely needed to own a petrol
driven vehicle – and prove to the company that you did own one – and you are
under no obligation to commute by it.
Perhaps
the company was justifying its policy through some macro-economic logic. By buying
vehicles, its employees are feeding the economy, spurring circulation of money
in it. But, once you buy a vehicle, it takes super-human will power not to use
it. That is when carbon emissions come into reckoning.
Assume
also that this was pointed out by an employee, informally and only orally, to
her immediate senior and also to her colleagues. But none cared, because each
has his or her self-interest (I almost typed out, “his or her own self-interest”, but
checked myself in time; who else but you can work in your “self-interest”?). So, it
must have continued in Nehru Place till the shift happened.
As
many companies in Gurgaon do, this newcomer must also be ferrying people in
buses, from and to Delhi. Yes, this must be a positive shift in reducing carbon
transmissions on the transport count, particularly if you discounted that over
the past three years many people could have been commuting to Nehru Place by
metro. Then, the carbon emissions calculations get a little more complex. I
will ignore.
The
employee who raised her voice against graded commuting allowance was not ready
to take this plan sitting down. She pointed out the advantage – again informally
–a last-mile connectivity offer at the Gurgaon end by the company to its staff,
both ways, but was ignored. The company may have taken a single step up in
being environmentally conscious but stopped at that. No scaling up.
The
company, I conclude in the overall reckoning, is merely less indifferent to the
environment than it was when in Nehru Place. Is this something to write home
about? I wouldn’t know.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
2 comments:
When any office shifts, conservation or environmental consideration is perhaps the last priority, if at all.About providing a pick up service to and fro the end point at Metro station, I somehow do not imagine many employees would prefer that to a total bus ride from point to point, company provided, of course except those who prefer to commute in personal transport.For one, company run bus is assured transport and one is assured of a seat. At least I would prefer a city to office bus, that's what I think. :)
You are precisely correct, across the board ... I am experiencing it ...
Thanks for coming in.
RE
Post a Comment