Top spot goes to HP in our latest Guide to Greener Electronics

Posted by Eoin D - 9 November 2011 at 11:46am - Comments
Guide to Greener Electronics Nov 2011
by-nc-sa. Credit: Greenpeace
Guide to Greener Electronics Nov 2011

We've just released a new version of the Guide to Greener Electronics. This time ranking 15 gadget and electronics companies on energy, greener products and sustainable operations. HP takes the lead at 5.9 out of a possible 10 points, followed by Dell, Nokia and Apple.

Previous releases of our Guide to Greener Electronics have prompted improvements within the electronics industry including phasing out hazardous substances like PVC and brominated flame retardants from their products. In its sixth year, it is now part of Greenpeace’s wider Cool IT campaign to persuade IT industry leaders to become climate action leaders too.

Electronics, such as computers, TVs and mobile phones are both resource and energy intensive to produce. That's why the guide’s new energy section focuses on how companies can lead the way by reducing their own energy use and using their influence in support of clean energy legislation.

Shoppers are increasingly concerned about the impact of what they buy, and they're getting better at spotting corporate greenwash and spin too. Since many of the world’s leading electronics companies rose to the challenge of phasing out the worst hazardous substances, we're now challenging them to improve their sourcing of minerals and the efficiency of energy use throughout their supply chain.

This year HP is in top position because it scores strongly for measuring and reducing carbon emissions from its supply chain, reducing its own emissions and advocating for strong climate legislation (HP report card).

Dell takes second position in the guide after making a dramatic improvement from tenth position in the last version. The PC maker scores well for having the most ambitious climate target, with a plan to reduce its emissions by 40 per cent by 2020, and a strong policy on sustainable paper sourcing (Dell report card).

Nokia has slipped from first place to third, after holding the top position for as many years. The Finnish phone maker can still steal back the top spot on environmental issues, but it needs to demonstrate how it will reduce future emissions through energy efficiency and renewable energy use (Nokia report card).

Meanwhile RIM's first report card shows plenty of room for improvement. The company behind Blackberry smartphones came in last among companies surveyed. That said, the Canadian company does score well on the important conflict minerals issue and sustainable paper policy.

You can see a summary of where all the major brands fall in our ranking and download company report cards or download the full report as a pdf.

Cloud computing firms like Facebook aren't ranked here, though they're certainly part of the story. Their increasing energy use for data centres is why we are also campaigning for them to quit using dirty energy and be climate leaders too.

Disappointed to see Acer doing poorly - curious to know how Brother would rank as I have one of their printers.

I'm wondering, are the companies that sub contract from the larger companies taken into account when calculating the larger companies score?

HTC has become one of the leading players in the mobile phone market for some time now, yet it isn't featured in the guide?

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this doesnt  helpp!

how iz diz bout de enviroment bruvv??

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