Sustainable IT in 2026: A Smarter Response to Rising Costs and Delayed Hardware
Sustainable IT is no longer just about reducing environmental impact, it’s becoming a practical response to real-world operational challenges.
With rising hardware costs, ongoing RAM shortages, and extended lead times delaying new device deployments, organisations are under increasing pressure to rethink how they source, manage, and extend their IT estate.
For many, sustainable IT programmes are emerging as the most effective way to maintain performance, control cost, and reduce dependency on constrained supply chains.
The Growing Challenge: Cost, Supply, and Delays
Across the market, businesses are experiencing:
- Increasing costs for new laptops, desktops, and infrastructure
- Component shortages, particularly memory, driving price volatility
- Longer lead times impacting project timelines and user onboarding
The traditional approach, replacing devices every 3–4 years and scaling infrastructure reactively, is quickly becoming unsustainable, both financially and operationally.
This shift is forcing IT leaders to ask a more strategic question:
How do we do more with the technology we already have?
Why Sustainable IT Is Gaining Momentum
Sustainable IT programmes focus on maximising the value of existing technology rather than defaulting to replacement.
This includes:
- Extending device lifecycles
- Refurbishing and redeploying hardware
- Optimising infrastructure usage
- Reducing waste across the IT estate
In the current climate, these initiatives don’t just support sustainability targets, they directly address cost pressures and supply constraints.
The outcome is simple: lower spend, reduced reliance on new hardware, and improved operational resilience.
The Role of Refurbishment in Modern IT Strategy
Endpoint devices remain one of the largest and most avoidable cost centres in IT.
Storm’s refurbishment programme enables organisations to:
- Extend the lifespan of laptops, desktops, and mobile devices
- Maintain performance and security standards
- Reduce reliance on delayed or expensive new hardware
- Cut e-waste and carbon impact
Devices are professionally assessed, rebuilt, and redeployed to a high standard, ensuring users continue to receive reliable, business-ready technology.
From an operational perspective, this creates immediate benefits:
- Faster turnaround compared to ordering new devices
- Reduced capital expenditure
- Greater flexibility when scaling teams or onboarding staff
In a market where lead times can disrupt delivery, refurbishment provides a controlled, predictable alternative.
Combining Sustainable Devices with Cloud Efficiency
While extending hardware lifecycle is critical, infrastructure optimisation remains equally important.
Cloud platforms such as Microsoft Azure allow organisations to:
- Scale resources based on demand
- Reduce unused capacity and energy waste
- Improve visibility and control over usage
When combined with sustainable endpoint strategies, this creates a more balanced IT estate, one that is both cost-efficient and adaptable.
Rather than over-investing in new hardware or over-provisioned environments, organisations can:
- Use what they already have more effectively
- Scale only where necessary
- Align IT spend more closely to actual business need
The Business Case for Sustainable IT
Sustainable IT programmes are increasingly being driven by operational outcomes, not just environmental goals.
Key benefits include:
- Cost control: Reduced spend on new devices and infrastructure
- Faster deployment: Less reliance on external supply chains
- Improved resilience: Greater flexibility during periods of shortage
- Sustainability gains: Lower carbon footprint and reduced e-waste
- Stronger reporting: Clear progress against ESG targets
For many organisations, the same initiatives that reduce environmental impact are also improving efficiency and competitiveness.
Why Organisations Are Rethinking “Buy New”
The assumption that “new is better” is being challenged.
In reality:
- Many devices are replaced before reaching end-of-life
- Performance can often be restored through refurbishment
- The environmental cost of manufacturing new hardware is significant
- Supply delays can slow down business-critical initiatives
Sustainable IT offers a more balanced approach, one that prioritises value, longevity, and performance over unnecessary replacement.
How Storm Supports Sustainable IT Strategies
At Storm, we help organisations take a practical, outcome-led approach to sustainable IT.
This includes:
- Assessing current device and infrastructure performance
- Identifying opportunities to extend lifecycle and reduce waste
- Delivering refurbishment programmes at scale
- Aligning cloud and infrastructure strategies to improve efficiency
The focus is not just on sustainability, but on delivering measurable business value through smarter technology decisions.
Conclusion: A Practical Way Forward
In a market defined by rising costs, hardware shortages, and delivery delays, sustainable IT is no longer optional.
It’s a strategic advantage.
By extending the life of existing devices, reducing reliance on constrained supply chains, and optimising infrastructure usage, organisations can:
- Maintain performance
- Control costs
- Build a more resilient IT estate
Sustainable IT isn’t just better for the environment, it’s a smarter way to operate.
REFERENCES
[1] - Kroeze, N. (2025). 5 Azure Sustainability Best Practices: Lower Carbon Footprint. [online] Intercept.cloud. Available at: https://intercept.cloud/en-gb/blogs/azure-sustainability-best-practices [Accessed 9 Jun. 2026].
[2] - EdB-MSFT (2024). What is Azure carbon optimization (Preview). [online] Microsoft.com. Available at: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/carbon-optimization/overview
[3] - Iqbal, Z. and Iqbal, Z. (2025). Moving to Azure: 4 Key Investments That Reduce Environmental Impact - Bridgeall. [online] Bridgeall. Available at: https://www.bridgeall.com/2025/11/13/moving-to-azure-4-key-investments-that-reduce-environmental-impact/ [Accessed 9 Jun. 2026].