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    Home5G & BeyondShell and DT agree contracts as they strive towards climate goals

    Shell and DT agree contracts as they strive towards climate goals

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    The two have signed an MoU as they move towards net-zero emissions, each fulfilling contracts for the other.

    Shell Gas & Power Developments and T-Systems International, Deutsche Telekom’s unit dedicated to enterprises, have signed an MoU which they say builds on an existing technological relationship between them.

    Under the terms of the agreement the two companies will:
    •    pursue the net-zero goals of both companies, their supply chains and customers;
    •    collaborate on innovations and services to accelerate Shell’s digital transformation; and
    •    work together to identify opportunities to co-invest and participate in new business models focused on the decarbonisation of society.

    Mutual good

    To these high-minded ends, Shell is supplying renewable energy to T-Systems sister company, T-Mobile US, which plans to run on 100% renewable energy by the end of 2021.

    In turn, NewMotion and ubitricity, subsidiaries of Shell which provide electric vehicle (EV) charging solutions across Europe, have awarded T-Systems a contract for Deutsche Telekom field engineers to install more than 10,000 EV chargers in Germany over the next three years.

    The collaboration on innovations and services, reflected in the renewed global master services agreement entered into between Shell and T-Systems in 2020, will see Shell’s current Dynamic Hosting Services solution replaced with the next version of Private Cloud.

    Both companies “aim to deepen their IT products and service capabilities” and explore new areas of digital innovation, including hybrid and edge computing, and 5G connectivity.

    Cooling, lighting

    Shell has also installed immersion cooling technology for greater computing and energy efficiency in one of the T-Systems data centres in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

    Deutsche Telekom and Shell are also exploring the viability of smart city solutions, aimed at helping cities decarbonise and providing aggregated city data. For example, Citykey, which could deliver EV-charging and mobility data on an app. The two companies are also exploring the potential of smart lighting projects with streetlight-based EV-charging possibilities.

    “We are delighted to deepen our relationship with Deutsche Telekom and help the company to pursue its net-zero pledge while progressing our own target to be a net-zero emissions energy business by 2050, in step with society,” said Elisabeth Brinton, Executive Vice President Renewables & Energy Solutions at Shell. “Getting society to net zero will require unprecedented levels of collaboration.”

    Can’t do it alone

    Adel Al-Saleh, Deutsche Telekom board member and CEO of T-Systems, said: “We are committed to acting responsibly along our entire value chain and working together with our clients is pivotal in this. No individual and no company can solve the climate challenge alone. This is why we have put sustainability at the core of our strategy as we aim to become the leading European full IT-service provider. This newly signed MOU allows Shell and

    Deutsche Telekom to leverage their long-term collaboration, teaming up in new areas that will benefit society.