To match the remainder of the electricity bought from non- renewable generators, Dell buys Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs)—tradeable environmental commodities which prove that electricity had been generated from renewable energy sources—from projects in the United States, China and India, mostly involving wind power.
director Mark Newton explains its thinking on deciding how to select the source of offsetting credits: “We could have just gone to the market and bought off-the-shelf offsets. But we felt that the most credible way to do this was to really roll up our sleeves and get involved in a single project.”
Once its electricity is accounted for, Dell still has about 40,000 tonnes of CO2
to offset. The company’s sustainable business
“We are maniacally focused on the downstream impacts. We are not making carpets or soda bottles here. We are making electronics that help others create solutions in their industries, to address climate change.” Among its commitments in this respect, Dell has a target to improve the average energy efficiency of its products by 25 per cent between 2008 and 2010, on top of an improvement of more than 50 per cent in the previous five years.
The choice was to provide 5 years of funding for a project protecting a 2,400 square kilometre area of tropical forest in Madagascar. Coordinated by the non-governmental organiza- tion Conservation International, the project will support con- servation efforts in the Fandriana-Vondrozo Forest Corridor on the island’s eastern escarpment, preserving the habitat of many endemic species including the Golden Bamboo Lemur, Greater Bamboo Lemur and Malagasy Poison Frog.
It is estimated that by reducing the deforestation rate, the funding will prevent about 500,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere over the 5 years, more than compensating for Dell’s projected emissions from fuel use and business air travel, according to Newton.
“We chose REDD (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) over things like methane capture because we want to send a signal that afforestation and deforestation is a very important issue—there is a lot of controversy over how we are going to account for this, how it is going to be included in regulatory schemes, and we wanted to promote its legitimacy.”
Mark Newton accepts that addressing its own direct emissions is the tip of the iceberg as far as Dell’s overall impact is concerned. He says that if anything, targeting that indirect impact is a higher priority for the company than achieving climate neutrality according to the existing rules.
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As for the upstream impacts—the emissions from production and transport of its components—Dell is putting active pressure on suppliers to measure and report their own emissions, and to publish plans for reducing them. If they don’t, they might not carry on supplying components to Dell. The company is working with some suppliers directly, to help identify where efficiencies can be made.
“Ultimately we believe that each enterprise needs to be accountable for its own impacts,” says Mark Newton. “I think if we send a signal that we are going to incorporate the impacts of our suppliers into our own footprint, in a way we are undercutting the responsibility that our suppliers need to take for their own impacts.”
Another ICT company in the Climate Neutral Network, Atea, also sees opportunities for reducing emissions beyond the direct activities of the company. Atea, which supplies IT equipment and services to companies in six Nordic and Baltic countries, has set up a website,
www.goitgreen.com, which gives practical guidance on how emissions can be saved through better use of computer systems.
“There are numerous direct ways of reducing CO2 emissions
from the ICT sector, such as virtualization, consolidation, power management, and using laptops instead of desktops,” says Atea’s Hannah Lind.
instance, better IT infrastructure will ensure equal possibilities to work from home. This is being used more and more as a way not only of saving CO2
“But beyond these direct measures, we believe the ICT sector holds the key to a number of other ways of saving CO2
, travel time and expenses, but also to help a sound work/life balance. . For
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