Newsletter

Green SupplyLine  >  Design Center  >  Operations and Compliance

Carbon footprint labeling: Are you ready for it?



Page 1 of 3

Courtesy of EE Times

PARIS — If you happen to be an electronics company fairly satisfied that your products comply with the nightmarish variety of "green" regulations like ROHS, WEEE and REACH, wait a minute. There's a new layer of regulation on the horizon: carbon-footprint labeling.

Bruno Berthon
Managing Director, Accenture

Pending regulations for such labels -- very much like nutrition labels posted on food products -- are already in the works in Europe, driven by the European Union, which has set 2012 as its implementation target date. The French government is also floating the idea of getting this done by 2011.

The implication to the electronics industry is that it's no longer enough to inform consumers how little power your company's electronics product consumes. You need to specify the quantity (in grams) of carbon-dioxide emissions associated with the manufacture, transport and recycling of your product.

Don't roll your eyes.

Regulators in Europe are planning to introduce carbon-footprint labeling for every product -- ranging from potato chips to shampoos.

Asked if electronics products will also be subject to this regulation, Bruno Berthon, managing director, responsible for sustainability services at Accenture, said, "It will be naturally a priority," considering the big carbon footprint electronics products produce.

Will carbon-footprint labels look like this?

According to Gartner's report entitled "Green IT: A New Industry Shock Wave," computing and telecom equipment is responsible for 2 percent of all global carbon emissions. The number is rapidly rising as demand for information technology increases.

Driven by retailers

The idea for carbon-footprint labels is not new. Big retailers such as Tesco in the U.K., Carrefour in France, and Wal-Mart in the United States have embraced the idea.

In the U.K., for the last few years, retailers have been already working on a carbon-footprint labeling scheme in collaboration with the Carbon Trust, an environmental consultancy funded by the British Government.

Wal-Mart, the world's biggest retailer, is developing a new measure, called by some in the industry as "Wal-Mart Index." The system will rate environmental and social sustainability of products over the course of their "lives." Wal-Mart has already recruited academics, supply chain experts and environmental groups to help create and implement the electronic indexing system within the next five years.



Page 2: Resistance from the electronics industry?  

Page 1 | 2 | 3



Rate this article
WORSE | BETTER
1 2 3 4 5




Related Content

WEBINAR
1. Under the Hood Seminar: Micron taps copper metallization for DDR2 DRAM

WEBINAR
2. Agilent Medalist Bead Probe Technology - A Simple and Proven Test Solution for Limited Access PCBs

WEBINAR
3. Introducing Spartan-3A FPGAs - Powering the Next Wave of High-Volume Applications!

WEBINAR
4. Under the Hood On-Demand Seminar Series

 


EE Times TechCareers
Search Jobs

Enter Keyword(s):


Function:


State:
  

Post Your Resume
-----------------
Employers Area
Most Recent Posts
Accenture seeking Project Management Team Lead in Charlotte, NC

Accenture seeking Software Engineer in Salt Lake City, UT

Boeing Company seeking Software Engineer in Herndon, VA

Switch and Data seeking Customer Solutions Engineer in Dallas, TX

Chart Industries seeking Sr. Developer in Cleveland, OH

More career-related news, resources and job postings for technology professionals

 Sponsor