Commentary
Carbon Disclosure In Discrete Measures
The Carbon Disclosure Project's first global supply chain report, due on March 5, should be an eye-opener -- not only for what it contains but for what it lacks. Acer, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and IBM are among the IT companies that joined the CDP Supply Chain Leadership Collaboration and will be represented in the report.The Carbon Disclosure Project's first global supply chain report, due on March 5, should be an eye-opener -- not only for what it contains but for what it lacks. Acer, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and IBM are among the IT companies that joined the CDP Supply Chain Leadership Collaboration and will be represented in the report.The report, says the CDP, will include carbon emissions reporting as well as thoughts on "future-proofing supply chain for a low carbon economy." Just what IT and other companies have in mind should be of great interest to all -- not least of which, to their suppliers.
Acer, whose plans include selling more "low-carbon" products, reported that it is unable to say how much of the 19,659.38 MWh of electricity it purchased last year for its Taiwan operation came from renewable sources. "This cannot be identified in Taiwan because Taiwan Power does not verify the source to the end user," Acer states in its 2008 report to the CDP. Taiwan Power, also known as Taipower, is the state-owned utility in Taipei.
More Insights
White Papers
- Creating the Enterprise-Class Tablet Environment - by Yankee Group
- How To Regain IT Control In An Increasingly Mobile World - by BlackBerry
Reports
More >>Webcasts
- Maximize ROI with Database Consolidation onto Private Clouds
- Outsourcing Security: What Every Potential Cloud Security Customer Should Know
HP has previously stated a goal "to report energy use and associated greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) in HP's first-tier suppliers, representing more than 70% of our materials, components, and manufacturing supplier spend." It estimates these GHG emissions "are on the same order of magnitude as the emissions associated with the energy used by [its] products during customer use."
Dell, for its part, requires its top-tier suppliers, representing more than 80% of its worldwide procurement, to publicly report their GHG emissions.
Thirty-four global corporations participated in the report.
Related Reading
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. | |
|
|
T-Shirt Giveaway: Each week we're selecting one great comment from our readers. The author of the comment will receive an InformaitonWeek Community t-shirt. So get posting! |
Subscribe to RSSResource Links
This Week's Issue
Technology Whitepapers
- Creating the Enterprise-Class Tablet Environment - by Yankee Group
- How To Regain IT Control In An Increasingly Mobile World - by BlackBerry
- The BlackBerry PlayBook tablet's Good Bones - by BlackBerry
- Red Alert: Why Tablet Security Matters - by BlackBerry
- New Visual and Wizard-Driven Paradigms for Exploring Data and Developing Analytic Workflows












