The News: Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability will soon be available for general use to help Microsoft customers achieve their sustainability goals. Staring June 1, capabilities from Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability are designed to help facilitate and accelerate a company’s sustainability journey — regardless of where they are starting from. Read the full announcement on the Microsoft blog.
Analyst Take: Sustainability goals and initiatives are no longer a nice to have — today they are are a business imperative. In fact, we believe that sustainability is quickly rising to the same level of importance in the C-suite that digital transformation has been over the course of the last number of years, and with good reason. Customers care about sustainability, employees care about sustainability and we believe that interest and concern is going to continue to grow. It’s clear that Microsoft agrees.
That’s why Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability is a timely solution. Released last summer for public preview, the offering will be released for general availability on June 1. Microsoft’s Cloud for Sustainability offering will help companies accelerate their sustainability journeys, embed sustainability in everything, and discover new value with sustainability. Even more compelling, messaging around Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability is very compelling: it doesn’t matter where an organization is on their sustainability journey – this offering is designed to meet customers wherever they are in their sustainability journeys.
Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability sits on top of every cloud offering that Microsoft has, but it works within all the other offerings as well. Here’s a glimpse at what that looks like:
Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability is designed to bring together data management and other intelligence capabilities in a cloud-based platform to help organizations make decisions regarding their sustainability goals and initiatives with ease. The capabilities customers can expect from this offering include:
Speaking of partners, Microsoft can’t do this alone — these days almost no one can, and that’s not a bad thing. Thinking holistically about the partner ecosystem and what solutions everyone can bring to the table to address problems and solve needs is part of the value proposition here — and an attractive one. Partner solutions for Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability will help organizations plan and implement additional strategies to deliver sustainability progress. Some of the partners involved today in Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability include:
We’ve worked directly with some of these partners before and what they are doing is both innovative and exciting. Seeing organizations like Honeywell, Ecovadis, Bentley, ABB, Iconics, Johnson Controls and TransparencyOne involved, with their partner solution offerings, BlueYonder and its transportation management solutions, and guidance and advisory from industry leaders and integrators like Accenture, Avande, Capgemini, EY, PWC, and Tata add much caché to the Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability offering. All partner solutions will be available and accessible through the partner portal, and we’ve been assured that this is only the beginning — there will be more partners to come.
Like many of the Big Tech players, ten years ago, Microsoft set an internal goal to reduce carbon emissions. In 2020, the company set an ambitious plan to be carbon negative by 2030 and to remove its historical carbon emissions by 2050. The company also pledged $1 billion to a climate innovation fund for the global development of carbon reduction. Other initiatives include sustainable data centers in Europe.
Microsoft Cloud for Sustainability is a smart solution and the time for it is most definitely right. Many organizations have set their own sustainability goals and objectives, now getting there is quickly becoming their biggest challenge. And figuring out the right technology solutions to add to the tech stack to make that possible is where attention is turning. I’m looking forward to GA of this offering on June 1st and then watching to see how it’s adopted and then I’ll look forward to seeing it in use and hearing some customer success stories.
Disclosure: Futurum Research is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum Research as a whole.
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The original version of this article was first published on Futurum Research.
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