Apple announces environmental progress in China; applauds supplier commitment to clean energy

Apple today announced a significant commitment by major supplier Lens Technology to run its Apple operations on entirely renewable energy. This unprecedented commitment, combined with zero waste compliance from all final assembly sites, furthers Apple’s efforts to help manufacturers lower their carbon footprint and reduce waste in China, helping to advance China’s transition to a new green economy.

Lens Technology has committed to power all of its glass production for Apple with 100 percent renewable energy by the end of 2018, as part of Apple’s industry-leading supply chain clean energy program announced last year. Lens is the first supplier to make a clean energy commitment for all of its Apple production, and will meet its goal through an unprecedented power purchase agreement with local wind projects.

Apple is working with suppliers to help transform the environmental landscape in China, and is proud to announce all 14 of its final assembly sites in China are now compliant with UL’s Zero Waste to Landfill validation. The UL standard certifies all of their manufacturing waste is reused, recycled, composted, or, when necessary, converted into energy. Since the program began in January 2015, the sites have diverted more than 140,000 metric tons of waste from landfills.

“We want to show the world that you can manufacture responsibly and we’re working alongside our suppliers to help them lower their environmental impact in China,” said Lisa Jackson, Apple’s vice president of Environment, Policy and Social Initiatives, in a statement. “We congratulate Lens for their bold step, and hope by sharing the lessons we’ve learned in our transition to renewable energy, our suppliers will continue to access clean power projects, moving China closer to its green manufacturing goals.”

“Our power purchase agreement is the first of its kind in southern China and we hope it will serve as an example for other companies looking to transition to cleaner, more economical sources of power,” said Lens CEO Zhou Qunfei, in a statement. “We’re pleased to be the first supplier to commit to covering all of our Apple production with renewable energy, and proud to source from local Hunan wind farms to power our facilities in Changsha.”

Lens’ manufacturing with Apple currently includes two facilities in Changsha, Hunan province. Wind energy will cover 100 percent of the energy consumed producing Apple products at Lens facilities by 2018, avoiding nearly 450,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide each year, equivalent to the energy use in 380,000 Chinese homes.

Through its clean energy program, Apple will partner with suppliers in China to install more than 2 gigawatts of new clean energy in the coming years, avoiding over 20 million metric tons of greenhouse gas pollution in the country between now and 2020. Foxconn committed in October to construct 400 megawatts of solar, starting in Henan province, by 2018. The manufacturer is now well on its way to constructing the first 80 megawatts of that commitment.

Earlier this year, Foxconn final assembly sites at Guanlan and Taiyuan were the first in China to receive UL’s Zero Waste to Landfill validation. With the recent addition of 12 manufacturing sites, all of Apple’s final assembly production in China is now zero waste compliant.

“We applaud innovative companies, like Apple, that are leading by actively reducing the environmental impact of manufacturing operations,” said UL president and CEO Keith Williams, in a statement. “Achieving zero waste is an extensive effort that requires close coordination across all facets of a company’s operations, especially when the commitment is global.”

Apple has taken significant steps to protect the environment by transitioning from fossil fuels to clean energy. Today, the company is powering 100 percent of its operations in China and the US, and more than 93 percent of its worldwide operations, with renewable energy.

Learn more about Apple’s environmental efforts at apple.com/environment.

Source: Apple Inc.

MacDailyNews Take: Anything that helps China reduce pollution is certainly good thing.

2 Comments

  1. Bravo Apple! Of course reducing the pollution is only treating symptoms. Folks may remember the ozone hole issue years ago, caused by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). Everyone was into reduce the amounts of CFCs into atmosphere. Well that’s all fine and dandy but the beauty of that model is that 99% of chlorine compounds put into the atmosphere are done so by human activity.

    I was quite involved with this at the time and listening to these experts go on and on for quite some time on all the processes to essentially reduce the chlorine in the atmosphere I (on behalf of the group I represented) asked what was going to be done to remove the chlorine already in the atmosphere. The silence of the crowd, not even the crickets were chirping.

    Giving time for the pause to sink in, indicative as that concept had never ever even entered their minds I continued with an analogy. The guy goes to a doctor cause he’s sick. Turns out he’s getting poisoned by 50 darts a day. The proposal is to reduce the amount of darts to 10 and to do nothing about removing the poison in the system. My boss at the time was so pleased and amazed at how I used to just stump these brilliant minds into silence.

    Even to this day human beings have no major input whatsoever removing chlorine from the atmosphere. Reducing toxic compounds that’s fine but the big silent issue with pollution, is removing/transforming those toxic compounds.

    Humans are the only creature I am aware of that produces toxic compounds that are toxic not only to itself but to all other living creatures. Something to think about, maybe.

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