London, United Kingdom —
We here at Greenpeace pride ourselves in getting into places we're not supposed to be, like nuclear power plants and weapons test sites. So it really, really hurts to get kicked out of something like the Mac Expo -- where we had permission to attend! All we want is better environmental policies from Apple: is that so heretical that we get thrown out?
Our volunteers had set up a stall to sign up fellow Mac fans in the
effort to get Apple to go green. We handed out some flyers. We
handed out some organic green apples. We talked to lots of cool people
about how uncool it was for Apple to be neglecting their environmental
impact.
As Tom Dowdall writes over on the Making Waves blog,
"most visitors were very interested and showed support for the campaign
by signing up online or writing to Steve. But it seems other exhibitors
where not so happy."
Iza Kruszewska, Greenpeace International
campaigner at the expo, says "Apple should be a world leader in the
greening of the electronics industry, not lagging behind." Why
would we expect anything less of the world's coolest company?
Bottom of the barrel
Apple scored 11th place (out of 14) on a ’Guide to Greener Electronics’
recently released by Greenpeace, with a poor showing on almost all
criteria. The company fails to embrace the precautionary
principle, withholds its full list of regulated substances, provides no
timelines for eliminating toxic polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and no
commitment at all to phasing out all uses of brominated flame
retardants (BFRs). Ok, we know. That's a lot of letters.
Bottom line: Apples contain poisonous stuff that ends up in China and
India as e-waste, and which other computer manufacturers have committed
to get rid of. When iPods, Macs and other items in the Apple
product range get thrown away, most get disassembled, melted, and
picked apart by kids with no health and safety protection. NOT cool.
Apple
reports on the amount of its electronic waste that gets recycled, which
is a good thing. And they do take back computers in the US for
proper recycling. But worldwide, their policies on taking back
products from their customers are in the back of the pack by industry
standards.
"It’s time for Apple to use clean components in all
of its products and to provide a free take-back program to reuse and
recycle its products wherever they are sold. We are challenging the
world leader in design to also be a world leader in environmental
innovation. We challenge Apple to have a product range on the market by
2007 which is free of the worst toxic chemicals." says Iza.
The customer is always right. And the customer wants green.