AMSTERDAM -- Greenpeace wants electronics companies to clean up their acts.
The activist environmental protection organization this week released its study of the "green credentials" of the top electronics OEMs. Ranked on their use of toxic chemicals and
electronic waste (e-waste) policies,
Dell and
Nokia scored highest -- albeit a "barely respectable" 7 out of 10 -- while
Apple, Motorola and
Lenovo finished at the bottom of the class. The average score for the 14 companies reviewed was 4 of 10.
The Greenpeace scorecard purports to ascertain which of the companies are doing the most to remove the worst toxic chemicals from their products
and which companies have good recycling
For a copy of the report, click
here. To see the ranking criteria, click
here.
"The scorecard will provide a dynamic tool to green the electronics
sector by setting off a race to the top," said Iza Kruszewska, Greenpeace International toxics campaigner. "By taking back their discarded
products, companies will have incentives to eliminate harmful
substances used in their products, since this is the only way they can
ensure safe reuse and recycling of electronic waste."
Nokia and Dell share the top spot in the ranking. According to Greenpeace, those two OEMs believe that as
producers they should bear individual responsibility for taking back
and reusing or recycling their own-brand discarded products. Nokia
leads the way on eliminating toxic chemicals, since the end of 2005 all
new models of mobiles are free of polyvinyl chloride and all new
components to be free of brominated flame-retardants from the
start of 2007. Dell has also set ambitious targets for eliminating
these harmful substances from its products.
Lenovo, the Chinese computer manufacturer which also owns the former IBM PC arm, ranked last, scoring just 1.3 of 10.
The
guide will be updated every quarter, Greenpeace said. Companies are
scored solely on information publicly available on their global
websites.