Windows IT Pro is the leading independent community for IT professionals deploying Microsoft Windows server and client applications and technologies.
  
  
  Advanced Search 


April 04, 2007

Lenovo Tops in Environmental Friendliness

RSS
Subscribe to Windows IT Pro | See More News and Analysis Articles Here | Reprints | Or get the Monthly Online Pass—only $5.95 a month!

Greenpeace this week said that PC maker Lenovo was the world's most environmentally friendly electronics firm, thanks to dramatic improvements in its hardware recycling efforts. Meanwhile, Mac-maker Apple, which has global warming guru Al Gore on its board of directors, came in dead last on the list of 14 firms Greenpeace highlighted.

Greenpeace began issuing its environmental ratings for electronics firms on a quarterly basis last year. The organization examines which toxic chemicals electronics firms use while making hardware, and what efforts the companies employ to help former customers recycle their products when they're no longer usable. Greenpeace says that no electronics firms are truly "green" in that all of them contribute, in some way, to environmental distress.

Lenovo, which topped the list this quarter after ranking poorly in the last survey, made big gains by offering no-questions-asked recycling services for old hardware in all of the countries where its products are sold. However, Lenovo also uses some of the most toxic chemicals possible in its manufacturing plants.

Last place Apple lost marks for its toxic chemical use and poor recycling efforts. In fact, as Apple fans, Greenpeace is so disturbed by Apple's poor marks that it's set up a special Web site describing the problems. "Why do Macs, iPods, iBooks and the rest of [Apple's] product line contain hazardous substances that other companies have abandoned?" the site reads. "A cutting edge company shouldn't be cutting lives short by exposing thousands of children in the developing world to dangerous chemicals."

According to Greenpeace, the top five most environmentally friendly electronics firms are Lenovo, Nokia, Sony/Ericsson, Dell, and Samsung. The remainder of the list includes Motorola,
Fujitsu/Siemens, Hewlett-Packard, Acer, Toshiba, Sony, LG Electronics, Panasonic, and Apple.

End of Article



Reader Comments
this is an old video, but it's completely relevent here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Uo_4kyrkDc

XP

Waethorn April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


8-core Mac Pro's with 3TB of storage and 16GB of RAM?

Finally, a Vista-capable machine!

stevejobs April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


http://tinyurl.com/p8eoo

finally, an OSX-capable machine!

XP

Waethorn April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"Last place Apple lost marks for its toxic chemical use and poor recycling efforts. In fact, as Apple fans, Greenpeace is so disturbed by Apple's poor marks that it's set up a special Web site describing the problems."

Does that mean Greenpeace activists use Macs? Maybe they should drive Hummers and complain about their fuel efficiency too.

shark47 April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"Meanwhile, Mac-maker Apple, which has global warming guru Al Gore on its board of directors, came in dead last on the list of 14 firms Greenpeace highlighted."

That makes Al Gore what? A hypocrite.

"8-core Mac Pro's with 3TB of storage and 16GB of RAM?"

A giant leap in Apple's efforts to destroy the environment!

shark47 April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


I'm suprised with Apple's low scores. They should be the least polluting because of their low market share.

anonymous April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"I'm suprised with Apple's low scores. They should be the least polluting because of their low market share."

I don't think Greenpeace measures the gross volume of polution, more like the per-unit pollution.

In the same way an iPod is thermically inefficient when compared to an LN2 cooled PC. Sure the iPod uses no wattage compared to the PC, but while the iPod makes the room hotter, the PC makes the room cooler.

You can make numbers say what you want, it all matters in the delivery. That's the real reason I'm suprised about the report. Even with all the fiddling by the admittedly bias Greenpeace, Apple scrapped up the bottom of the mucky green barrel.

will84 April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"That makes Al Gore what? A hypocrite."

He didn't need this. The $30,000/year electricity bill was enough.

itpro244 April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Wait...I may have to rethink my post on the last EU article...lets see, does Steve Jobs and Apple do good or bad for the world??? Hmmm, what to do............................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................
..............................................................................................................
........................................................Yes, DRM free music is a much higher priority in my mind, so I can still say it...God Bless Steve Jobs and Apple!!!

--tayme

tayme April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Oh, and Al Gore is an idiot; even though he invented the internet!

--tayme

tayme April 04, 2007 (Article Rating: )


 See More Comments  1   2 

You must be a registered user or online subscriber to comment on this article. Please log on before posting a comment. Are you a new visitor? Register now




Top Viewed ArticlesView all articles
Command Prompt Tricks

One reader shares his tip for setting up the command prompt to reflect a remote path. ...

WinInfo Short Takes: Week of November 9, 2009

An often irreverent look at some of the week's other news, including some more Windows 7 sales momentum, some Sophos stupidity, Microsoft's cloud computing self-loathing, more whining from the browser makers, Zoho's "Fake Office," and much, much more ...

Understanding File-Size Limits on NTFS and FAT

A general confusion about files sizes on FAT seems to stem from FAT32's file-size limit of 4GB and partition-size limit of 2TB. ...


Related Events WinConnections and Microsoft® Exchange Connections

IT Greenies: Ten Top Environmental and Cost Saving Technologies

Check out our list of Free Email Newsletters!

News and Analysis eBooks Getting Maximum Performance from Your Web-based Applications

Business Process Automation - Managing Cost in Your Enterprise

Related News and Analysis Resources Introducing Left-Brain.com, the online IT bookstore
Looking for books, CDs, toolkits, eBooks? Prime your mind at Left-Brain.com

Discover Windows IT Pro eLearning Series!
Clear & detailed technical information and helpful how-to's, all in our trademark no-nonsense format


Windows IT Pro Home Register FAQ for Windows WinInfo News
Europe Edition About Us Contact Us/Customer Service Media Kit Affiliates / Licensing  
SQL Server Magazine Office & SharePoint Pro DevProConnections IT Job Hound
Left-Brain.com Technology Resource Directory asp.netPRO ITTV Windows SuperSite 
 
 Windows IT Pro is a Division of Penton Media Inc.
 © 2009 Penton Media, Inc. Terms of Use | Privacy Statement