Welcome to the Sustainable Computing Workshop 2026

The workshop will be held as part of the 23rd ACM International Conference on Computing Frontiers (CF'26), in Catania, Sicily, Italy, May 19th-21st. The accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings published by ACM.

Technical program (May 19th)
10:40 - 11:10
All LCA models are wrong. Are some of them useful? Towards open computational LCA in ICT
Vincent Corlay, Olivier Weppe, Marie-Anne Lacroix, Leo Saillenfest, Maxime Peralta, Maxime Pelcat, David Bekri, Pierre-Yves Pichon and Sebastien Rumley
11:10 - 11:35
Analysis of the Relationship Between Carbon Footprint and Mineral Resource Depletion in the Life Cycle Assessment of Digital Systems
Benjamin Chedotel, Thibaut Marty, Alexandre Mercat, Francois Berry, Jarno Vanne and Maxime Pelcat
11:35 - 12:05
Influence of Environmental Indicators Aggregation Methods for Eco-designing Integrated Circuits
Madeleine Abernot, Romain Lemaire and Maxime Péralta
12:05 - 12:30
Exploring Instruction Set Extension Emulation for Long-Term Support of RISC-V Processors
Jean-Michel Gorius, Arthur Perais and Erven Rohou
12:30 - 13:00
Poulpe: a software-hardware toolchain to clone legacy circuit boards
Caroline Collange
Submission
In line with the submission rules of CF26, we encourage the submission of both full papers and short papers containing high-quality research describing original, unpublished work.
  • Full papers are expected to provide well-rounded contributions, where novelty, originality, and sufficient preliminary evaluation are included. Length: maximum of eight (8) pages (excluding references).
  • Short papers may be position papers or may describe preliminary or highly speculative work. Length: maximum of four (4) pages (including references).
All papers should use the double-column ACM conference format. Page limits include figures, tables and appendices. Authors may buy up to two (2) extra pages for accepted full papers, bringing the total length to a maximum of ten (10) pages (excluding references).
As the review process is double-blind, the removal of all identifying information from paper submissions is required (e.g., cite own (previous) work in the third person, avoid references to machines and/or systems that can identify the paper authors, etc.).
Papers not conforming to the above submission policies on formatting, page limits, and the removal of identifying information, are likely to be automatically rejected. Authors are strongly advised to submit their papers with the final list of authors in the submission system, as changes may not be feasible at later stages (due to publisher restrictions).
Submitted papers must represent original unpublished research. If the submission extends from a prior short paper, there should be substantial new content and intellectual contribution, and this should be clearly mentioned. Concurrent submission of the same paper to any other conference or journal is not permitted. While authors may post a draft of their paper on arXiv or as a technical report on their institution's website, they should take care to use a sufficiently different title and name for their system to ensure the anonymity of the submission.
By submitting your article to an ACM Publication, you are hereby acknowledging that you and your co-authors are subject to all ACM Publications Policies, including ACM's new Publications Policy on Research Involving Human Participants and Subjects. Alleged violations of this policy or any ACM Publications Policy will be investigated by ACM and may result in a full retraction of your paper, in addition to other potential penalties, as per ACM Publications Policy.
As per ACM Publications Policies, any use of artificial intelligence (AI) generated content in a paper must be clearly disclosed in the acknowledgements section of the submission. The authors are responsible for the correctness of any generated material. The authors also attest that the submitted paper accurately represents their own novel intellectual contributions, and is not primarily the result of the tool's generative capabilities.
Committees
Program Chair
Chiara Sandionigi, CEA, France
Publication Chair
Thibaut Marty, INSA Rennes, France
Organization Committee
David Bol, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
Christian Herglotz, BTU Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany
Hana Krichene, CEA, France
Daniel Ménard, INSA Rennes, France
Sébastien Rumley, HES-SO, Switzerland
Maxime Pelcat, INSA Rennes, France
Technical Program Committee
Coral Calero, University of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
Giorgio Di Natale, Université Grenoble Alpes, France
Abdoulaye Gamatié, LIRMM, France
Gage Hills, Harvard SEAS, United States of America
Loïc Lannelongue, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Kevin Martin, Université Bretagne Sud, France
Wim Vanderbauwhede, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
Michael Welzl, University of Oslo, Norway