RESOURCES

Insights, results and shared intelligence

Explore all resources and outputs from the Ecolfows accelerator projects here. Gain deeper insights into the initiatives, including the demo app, and learn about the methodologies used to measure and estimate the energy consumption and carbon footprint of streaming.
Direct Device Measurement Results

The findings and conclusions of the device measurement tests provided some useful insight into how different types of display react to different scenarios.

The act of streaming is a very small proportion of the energy consumption in the home, the device and display used is much more significant.

Rendering SDR as HDR can use an additional 10% to 30% more energy.

Power Factor can have a significant impact on the electricity required to be generated to power the end device during operation, requiring anything up to 10x more.

Every display shows differing characteristics of power consumption, some along technology lines, some down to specific manufacturer decision, with some counter-intuitive behaviours.

Reliable power consumption reduction can be seen when switching to SDR content / not having HDR enabled and using Audio Only mode.

Varying the brightness of the room viewing conditions can result in significant power variation on displays - up to doubling power consumption in bright conditions.

Multicast or peer to peer streaming had no significant energy impact on the display device - the end to end energy profile, including content distribution, has not yet been evaluated, but where we would expect to see an impact.

Bit rate reduction with devices like streaming sticks and TVs had no significant reduction in energy consumption.

This led the group to form the following conclusions:

The type of display/device you use has a big impact on energy consumption.

Manufacturer and OEM decisions also have a big impact on energy consumption.

Improvements to energy efficiency requires applications to be aware of the in-use display type - this requires engagement from device and display manufacturers.

Emissive or high dimming zone displays have more promise in saving energy.

Policy decisions by manufacturers of streaming devices means that most default to Auto-HDR, and this has a significant impact on energy consumption without significant benefit.

LED based displays warrant more research on improvements to energy consumption due to the consumer popularity of lower cost displays.

Consumer education could have a more significant impact than any of the measures investigated on device control, including: viewing in dimmer rooms; using devices that are optimised for streaming; and by considering the usage of high performance peripherals including games consoles.

Using hardware decoding provides the most power efficient approach.

Building a More Sustainable Future for Streaming

Discover how the IBC ECOFLOW II Accelerator is helping broadcasters and streaming providers reduce energy consumption across the video delivery chain, from encoding and distribution to playback and operations. Featuring real-world innovations from industry leaders including BT, Bitmovin, Divitel, Humans Not Robots, and Quanteec.
Find out more
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People behind the project

These videos feature candid interviews with key contributors and stakeholders involved in the project, offering unique perspectives on its goals, challenges, and innovations.
Each video provides insight on sustainability, and the impact of the project on the Media & Entertainment industry.

Ecoflow IBC Booth Presentation Document
Image Gallery
Ecoflow TV Application

These images offer a snapshot of the Ecoflow demo application, a TV app designed to enable comprehensive measurement and demonstrate key sustainability features.