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SAP: Next-gen RFID will battle climate change

A case of smart thinking...

Tags: henning kagermann, rfid, sap

By Natasha Lomas

Published: 20 July 2007 10:45 BST

A new generation of RFID products could play a significant role in battling climate change, according to SAP CEO Henning Kagermann.

Kagermann was speaking at a press conference in London to announce the software giant's second-quarter results.

He said SAP's customers are already involved in using RFID at the supply chain management level but looked ahead to "the next generation of these type of more intelligent products".

He told silicon.com: "We have a big debate about climate change these days and big demand for energy efficiency. The smart direction is to come to an efficient energy market. We can get an efficient energy market by making the meter smart - smart meter-reading - so that we can on an hourly or on a per-second basis match supply and demand."

I am missing him in my heart but not in my business.

-- SAP CEO, Henning Kagermann, on former exec Shai Agassi

Earlier this month, analyst Datamonitor predicted massive growth in smart metering in Europe and North America over the next five years as utilities overhaul existing infrastructures to improve power consumption monitoring and encourage consumers to reduce their energy usage.

Reporting its second-quarter results, SAP said software and related services in the quarter generated €1.71bn in revenues - an increase of 16 per cent on the same period last year, while software revenues stood at €715m, an increase of 18 per cent on 2006 figures. Total revenues were €2.42bn, a 10 per cent increase on last year, it said.

SAP's operating income increased 10 per cent on last year's Q2 figure to €577m, while net income was up eight per cent at €449m or €0.37 per share.

Kagermann said Asia Pacific would be growth engine number one for SAP in future.

Asked about the ongoing row between its wholly owned subsidiary TomorrowNow and rival software giant Oracle, Kagermann said Mark White - the man appointed as TomorrowNow's executive chairman in the wake of revelations of "inappropriate" downloads from Oracle's website - is "taking action".

But Kagermann refused to be drawn on how he saw the case developing. He said: "Why should I speculate now?"

Asked whether SAP was missing former rising star exec Shai Agassi, who left the company back in March, Kagermann said: "I am missing him in my heart but not in my business."

SAP also provided details of A1S, its upcoming mid-market suite of applications planned for September.

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