Lisa Jackson, Phó Chủ tịch Apple cho vấn đề Bền vững, đã tuyên bố rằng Apple không tính thêm phí để thực hiện các nỗ lực giảm khí thải carbon trên các sản phẩm công nghệ tiêu dùng phổ biến của họ. Tại Hội nghị Reuters NEXT ở New York ngày thứ Tư vừa qua, bà Jackson cũng nhấn mạnh rằng CEO Tim Cook đã thiết lập chuẩn mực cho việc này. Với tư cách là công ty có vốn hóa thị trường khoảng 2,8 nghìn tỷ USD, Apple muốn thể hiện một hướng đi mới có thể áp dụng cho các doanh nghiệp khác. Ông Cook đã định hình hướng đi này và bà Jackson muốn thể hiện điều này là không chỉ vì họ là Apple, mà là bởi họ hiểu cách làm cho năng lượng sạch và vật liệu có thể tái chế hoạt động trong chuỗi sản xuất và giảm khí thải.
#Apple #Bền_vững #Nỗ_lực_giảm_đi_ô_nhiễm #Reuters_NEXT #Công_nghệ #Môi_trường #Giảm_thải_đồng_từ_năng_lượng #Tài_chính và #Môi_trường #Tim_Cook #Lisa_Jackson
(Reuters) -Apple does not charge more to account for its carbon reduction efforts on its widely-used consumer technology products, its top executive for sustainability said on Wednesday at the Reuters NEXT conference in New York.
“We don’t factor in a premium to take care of the work that we’re doing,” Apple Vice President Lisa Jackson said in an interview with Reuters Editor-in-Chief Alessandra Galloni.
Apple, with a roughly $2.8 trillion market capitalization, which makes it the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, wants to show a way forward that can apply to other businesses, Jackson said. Apple CEO Tim Cook has set the tone, according to Jackson.
“I want to do it in a way that other businesses can say this isn’t because they’re Apple,” said Jackson, referring to Cook’s direction. “It’s because they understand how to make clean energy and (recyclable) materials work in the manufacturing chains and drive emissions down.”
Apple has been aggressive among large U.S. companies in advocating for stricter public environmental policies. In September it endorsed legislation in California to require companies to report on their greenhouse gas emissions, even though trade groups in the state opposed the idea that recently became law.
Under Jackson, formerly the head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apple was also an early backer of federal rules to require companies to disclose emissions from their value chains.
Many other executives from large U.S. companies oppose the idea, which has not been finalized by securities regulators. Critics say it is easier for a tech company like Apple to meet such goals than it would be for corporations in more energy-intensive industries.
In her remarks on Wednesday, Jackson nodded at the challenges of figuring out and reporting supply-chain details. “Even making the windmills to generate renewable energy has a carbon footprint, and so you have to account for that,” she said.
For a recent model of the Apple Watch, the company has reduced 78% of its carbon footprint but not some 8 kilograms of emissions for each device. “We just right now don’t have the ability to take care” of that, which includes the environmental impact of transportation and logistics.
Jackson also said Apple is working with smaller processing companies to recycle rare earths and other materials. “That’s somewhere Apple can invest and then help to scale and bring (other) businesses along,” she said.
(Reporting By Jeffrey Dastin and Kenneth Li in New York and Ross Kerber in Boston; Editing by Daniel Wallis)