Panorama
 
 
 
 
 

DELL TARGETED FOR BREAKING PROMISE ON TOXIC CHEMICALS


Environmental Panorama
International
March of 2010


29 March 2010 - International — Greenpeace activists unfurled banners of every size today outside the offices of Dell in Bangalore, Amsterdam, and Copenhagen, just as Dell executives meet to discuss a roadmap to finally remove the worst toxic chemicals from their electronics. The message around the world to Dell's founder and CEO: "Michael Dell: Drop the Toxics!" UPDATE

Dell continues to use PVC vinyl plastic and brominated flame retardants (BFRs) in all its computers, despite promising to eliminate these toxic substances. The giant PC maker committed publicly to be off these chemicals by the end of 2009. Well the deadline has passed and anyone buying a Dell computer will be sadly disappointed by what is in the box.

During production, use and disposal, PVC is the single most environmentally damaging of all plastics, and can form dioxin, a known carcinogen, when burnt during sub-standard recycling practices.

UPDATE: Monday should have marked an end to the talking with an internal meeting with Michael Dell to approve a plan outlining how Dell will bring PCs on the market free of the worst toxic chemicals. However at the end of Monday we heard just more talk and no action, with the meeting apparently postponed. (Read more on our blog)
BFRs which are highly resistant to degradation in the environment and are able to bio-accumulate (build up in animals and humans), can be released from products during use and can also form dioxins when burnt during the type of basic recycling practices commonly used in Asia and Africa.

Timing is everything
Dell's senior management team was set to decide Monday whether to approve a roadmap outlining quarter-by-quarter how to achieve progress towards a PVC/BFR-free status: for launching PCs free of PVC and BFRs. That's why our activists in the Netherlands, India and Denmark paid Dell a visit on this important day.

Dell isn't the only tech company in our Guide to Greener Electronics to have broken its public commitment to clean up. But for a company that aspires to be "the greenest technology company on the planet" Dell's lack of leadership in launching products free of PVC and BFRs is especially hypocritical and disappointing for customers.

Dell can make it right
Our campaigners have asked for roadmaps -- not just new phase out dates -- from all tech companies that have backtracked on their commitments for toxic chemical elimination.

We also want the companies, including Dell, to take a proactive position to ensure that their commitments for PVC and BFR elimination end up in the European Union's RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances in electronics) Directive. That way all electronics makers will have to clean up.

Watch mobile video footage from the action at Dell's building in Copenhagen.

Apple, HP, Acer and Wipro already offer PCs free of PVC and BFRs. Dell was the first company to provide a timeline (end of 2009) for eliminating these toxic substances in all its products. At the time we gave them credit for this positive move in the Guide to Greener Electronics. However, it was also the first company to backtrack on this commitment in May 2008 and despite a new timeline of 2011, the revised commitment is now to remove these substances in computing products only.

We want Dell to adopt a position on the RoHS Directive and advocate for it, as other leaders in the sector, like HP, Acer, Apple and Sony Ericsson, are already doing. Dell needs to play catch up.

The iPad, internet, climate change link in the spotlight

Greenpeace report shows cloud computing GHG emissions tripling by 2020 - 30 March 2010 - International — On the eve of the launch of the iPad, our latest report warns that the growth of internet computing could come with a huge jump in greenhouse gas emissions. We follow the data streams back to the data centres providing a cautionary tale about how the boom could see internet servers become a major cause of climate change. But it doesn't have to be that way, the great innovators of the digital age can and should be leaders in promoting an energy revolution.

"Make IT Green: Cloud Computing and its Contribution to Climate Change", shows how the launch of quintessential cloud computing devices like the Apple iPad, which offer users access to the "cloud" of online services like social networks and video streaming, can contribute to a much larger carbon footprint of the Information Technology (IT) sector than previously estimated.

To be clear we are not picking on Apple, we are not 'dissing' the iPad, but maybe someone can come up with an app that calculates the carbon footprint of using different web sites based on their location and energy deals. Apple is the master of promotion, and while we marvel at the sleek unpolluted design of the iPad, we need to think about where this is all leading and how like all good surfers we can make sure our environment stays clean and green.

The report builds on previous industry research and shows that at current growth rates data centres and telecommunication networks will consume about 1,963 billion kilowatts hours of electricity in 2020. That is more than triple their current consumption and more than the current electricity consumption of France, Germany, Canada and Brazil combined. However, the report also shows how IT can avert climate chaos by becoming a transformative force advocating for solutions that increase the use of renewable energy.

Download the PDF: http://www.greenpeace.org/make-it-green-briefing

As the internet grows as a platform -- a place where more things are done, not only stored away -- the IT industry's hunger for energy will increase. Efficiency is a hot topic in IT, but improving energy efficiency is only part of the solution, the industry also needs to take responsibility for where it gets its energy from in the first place. Simply put: will the cloud run on coal or renewable energy?

IT companies like Microsoft, Google, and IBM are now in powerful positions at the local, national, and international levels. They could use that influence to promote policies that will allow them to grow responsibly without fueling climate change.

For example, Facebook recently announced the construction of its own data center in Prineville, Oregon, running primarily on coal.

By choosing energy company PacifiCorp, a utility that sources the majority of its power from coal-fired power stations, Facebook missed a chance to promote the use of renewable energy and instead reinforced the coal industry's grip on the United Sates power grid.

Facebook members aren't taking this sitting down. More than 365,00 have joined groups in the weeks since Facebook's announcement, calling on the company to quit coal and become a climate leader.

The IT sector has the ability to help us combat climate change by innovating to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase energy efficiency. Technologies that enable smart grids, zero emission buildings and more efficient transport systems are key to cutting climate change pollution. But, given the current expansion in cloud computing, the industry also needs to get its own carbon footprint under control.

We are calling on IT industry giants to put their might behind government policies that give priority grid access for renewable sources like wind and solar energy. IT companies should also support economy-wide climate and energy policies around the world that peak climate emissions by 2015.

Please help us encourage the 21st century's great innovators to look beyond the cloud, to look beyond simply cutting their fuel bills and towards an energy revolution based on renewable energy sources.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
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