Toxic waste
Greenpeace has praised Nokia and blasted Apple over the use of toxic chemicals

Nokia hailed as greenest tech company

While Apple festers at the bottom of the barrel

Written by Iain Thomson

Greenpeace has released the latest Green Electronics Guide, which ranks technology companies based on their environmental record.

Nokia tops the list for taking a lead in getting rid of toxic chemicals in its products, and agreeing that companies have a responsibility to dispose of products they manufacture.

Apple was the lowest rated company for withholding details of regulated substances and giving no timelines for eliminating toxic polyvinyl chloride or brominated flame retardants.

"Apple is awarded the last position because the company has made absolutely no improvements to its policies or practices since the ranking was released three months ago, although most of its competitors have improved environmental policies," said Iza Kruszewska, Greenpeace International toxics campaigner.

"Despite being the world leader in innovation and design, Apple is losing the race by failing to keep up with the other companies."

In second place was Dell, which has made a major attempt to clean up its act since the first green audit earlier in the year. Fujitsu Siemens is in third position.

"We are witnessing a global shift towards greener PCs, with Acer and Lenovo, two major producers of PCs, committing to eliminating the use of the most hazardous chemicals from their product ranges," said Kruszewska.

"Most companies now score above average points on the ranking guide, with only five companies failing to score even the average of five points."

See also:

reader comments

related articles

Dell has won praise from environmental group Greenpeace for becoming the latest company to promise to remove the worst toxic chemicals from its computing products

Dell promises to go green

PC maker to remove the worst toxic chemicals from its products 27 Jun 2006

 

Gartner urges IT to go green

Technology's age of innocence nearing the end, warns analyst 02 Oct 2006

Tighter green laws will lead to IT component shortages

Gartner warns of trouble ahead as environmental laws tighten up 27 Nov 2006

Electronics firms praised over toxins, slammed over green energy

Latest Greenpeace report claims IT companies failing to adopt meaningful emissions targets 25 Nov 2008

Greenpeace updates tech rankings

Hardware vendors named and shamed 26 Jun 2008

Bad Apple slammed over toxic components - again

"The marketing is greener than the product," claim campaigners 03 Mar 2008

latest news

Ballmer highlights aims for New Year

Ballmer announces Windows 7 beta and future alliances designed to improve information sharing 08 Jan 2009

Active Storage completes UK Jigsaw

Jigsaw unveiled as Raid vendor's first non-US Platinum partner as it launches in Europe 08 Jan 2009

Dell quits Irish production

Vendor to slash 1,900 jobs in Limerick as it migrates assembly for EMEA customers to Poland 08 Jan 2009

poll

Challenging times ahead?

Challenging times ahead?

Do you think there will be a lot of channel job cuts in 2009?

Previous poll results

Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

Vendor Q&A: Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

During this Q&A session Paul Anderson, UK country manager of Trend Micro talks about the changing threat landscape and how Trend is working with resellers in 2009

Sara Yirrell and Rick Wallis

Vendor Q&A: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

In this exclusive vendor Q&A, Rick Wallis, UK sales director at NEC Computers talks to CRN editor Sara Yirrell about his firm’s plans for the channel.

events

Channel Expo 2009 logo

Channel Expo 2009

The UK's top reseller exhibition will return to the NEC on 20 May 2009

CRN Fight Night 2009

The channel's only white-collar boxing event is back

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation