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Austin, Texas
Joined on 02/20/2007 Posts: 1,138
Points: 4060
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Challenges and Rewards of Going Green

Thanks in large part to our customers, employees and suppliers, we’re making significant progress against our goal of becoming the ‘greenest’ technology company on the planet. We offer the industry’s only free and worldwide recycling program for consumers. We’ve incorporated energy efficiency throughout our products and business, and encourage our suppliers to do the same. We’re inviting our customers to share their thoughts and ideas on how together we can create a green future. Several customer ideas have already been implemented, and our work is only getting started.

In September 2007, we set a transparent, three-tiered goal to neutralize and account for the carbon-emissions impact of our worldwide operations by: 1) increasing energy-efficiency 2) maximizing purchases of green power and 3) responsibly offsetting remaining effects. In typical Dell fashion, we committed to measuring our progress against the most rigorous industry-sanctioned practices and pledged to share results with our customers and stakeholders around the world.  We were pleased to announce in August that we met our carbon-neutral goal several months ahead of schedule.

A story in Tuesday's Wall Street Journal raises some interesting points about how companies like ours size their carbon footprint and account for reducing their impact on the environment.

We are not the first company to meet a carbon-neutral goal, and we obviously hope many, many more will follow. Yahoo, Google and HSBC have also taken leadership roles in this regard. HarperCollins UK, which, along with the Wall Street Journal, is a News Corporation company, announced in December 2007 that they had met their carbon-neutral goal by pursuing a strategy very much like our own.

At Dell, we welcome and encourage discussion on climate issues. What we do collectively today factors into the health and future our planet and our global economy.  Every company should participate in the dialogue and solutions. The Journal story is a reminder that we're at the dawn of an essential and exciting new era of environmental responsibility, one that we're committed to helping lead.

Keep the thoughts, ideas and comments coming. Visit Direct2Dell, IdeaStorm and DellEarth. Tell or show us how we can build on our partnerships for a cleaner environment. The more heads devoted to this cause, the better for all of us.  We've already made tremendous progress in 2008 and, with your help, 2009 promises to be our greenest year yet.

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This is great to see how responsible and reasonable the people of America are.

 

You wouldnt beleive what is happening in Canada.

 

For example in British Columbia, we daily melt down 1000's of computers, monitors and laptops without anyone checking if they are still working or not.

According to the people that run the program, not even 1 power cord they have received is reusable, out of the some 100,000 computers they have melted down already. We find that a little hard to beleive. Here is more info, I am really looking for some help to resolve this issue.

 

 

 

I am looking for comments from Dell users and people in BC, Canada on this issue. The BC Government has setup a recycling program, and put it into private hands. Now 1000's of computers and laptops are melted down under the pretense or recycling and being green. 

Supposedly not even 1 power cords is reusable, not to mention not even 1 laptop or computer.???

 

Read more :

 

 

January 26, 2009

 

Barry Penner

Minister of the Environment

Parliament Buildings

Victoria, BC, V8V 1X4

 

 

Dear Mr. Barry Penner,

 

I sincerely appreciate your letter in response to me. Unfortunately the letter does not address the issues I have outlined in a satisfactory manner.

 

Firstly, you talk about their legislative obligation to “reuse” first prior to recycling, and that it is mandatory to reuse material prior to recycling. I am convinced and 100% certain that is not taking place. I invite you to jointly tour Encorp’s warehouse where thousands of computers are stored, Teck smelter, and a few of the busiest bottle depots, so I can personally show you the useful and working computers and components which are getting melted down unnecessarily.  Items such as power cords, printer cords, network cables that are never too old and can always be reused, on top of hundreds of laptops and computers.

 

I am very disappointed that you didn’t invite me for the tour with you, and that you didn’t visit the Encorp warehouse where the goods are stored prior to being shipped to the 3 recyclers (1 of which is Ecycle, the smallest of the 3). I hereby invite you to come and visit Encorp warehouse, Teck and a couple bottle depots together so I can personally show you the breaches in the legislation.

 

In regards to the Western Canada Computer Industry Association, they have been greatly discredited for shipping items to China, due to their inability to pay for the work their recyclers do, so they are forced to do the only profitable thing. This is all also due to Encorp’s “monopoly” and their “we own it all“ attitude when it comes to this program. I blame them for material going to China 100% as they are unwilling to even pay us the collection fee that every bottle depot and Salvation Army receives. For example if ERA ships 100 tons per month to Encorp, we get $0. If our next door bottle depot ships the same 100 tons they get $20,000.

 

This type of behavior and monopolistic practices are forcing companies in our industry to ship material to China where at least they are willing to pay for it, and therefore Encorp has to be held responsible for that. ERA has already shipped over 200 tons to Encorp, more than any bottle depot or collection depot Encorp has setup, and ERA has received $0 for its efforts, and Encorp has even refused to provide services to us, on top of warning our neighborhood bottle depot, that if they share any of the recycling revenues with ERA, they will get shut down.

 

These are very serious issues that need to be addressed immediately. Encorp cannot be allowed to break its legislative obligations by not reusing material; it cannot be allowed to punish companies that reuse material, while financially rewarding bottle depots and other collection depots that do NOT reuse material.

 

As you can see this is a serious contradiction of the legislative obligation they have to you, me and every resident of British Columbia.

ERA is attempting to implement a real reuse system within this electronics recycling program, which brings me to the next issue.

 

You talk about Recycling Council of BC, and ESABC creating a website to promote reuse?  Can you honestly tell me that you consider this good enough? Have you seen the website? It has 2 postings; 1 old monitor and 1 old keyboard. I can’t believe that in the entire province there are only 2 reusable items. The Recycling Council also does not allow nonprofit organizations or any computer stores to post their ads on there that they wish to receive these items. The Recycling Council receives huge financial contributions from Encorp and it is my personal opinion and knowledge that they are purposely denying the public of BC and ERA and similar organizations the opportunity to receive these computers.

 

I have called the Recycle hotline to be told the only place to take my computer is a bottle depot.  The Recycling Council receives too much money from Encorp to be entrusted with a task of reuse which goes directly against the best interests of the “Industry led program” and the directors of this “ESABC”

 

I ask of you, sincerely and with the best intentions in mind, to please meet with me personally to discuss these grave issues that I have outlined above,

 

 

Bojan Paduh

Electronic Recycling Association

(604) 215 4483

www.era.ca