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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.05.2006 ET
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Dell Plans to Triple Product Recovery Volume by 2009; Fiscal 2006 Sustainability Report Details Corporate Responsibility Progress, Goals
(CSRwire) OAKLAND, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 5, 2006--Dell (NASDAQ:DELL)
today announced it plans to triple the amount of product recovered from
customers by the end of 2009 and released its annual sustainability report
outlining current progress and future goals for the company's corporate
responsibility efforts. Other goals detailed in the report include the
company's environmental design plans and commitments to workplace
standards for the company's global supply chain.
Major goals outlined in the FY06 report include:
-- Introduction of a new supplier audit tool to help ensure good
workplace practices throughout the company's supply chain;
-- Global compliance with the European Union's Restriction on the use
of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) directive;
-- Enhanced product energy efficiency through improvements in product
design; and
-- Tripling the recovery and recycling of retired computers by the
end of 2009.
Dell's annual sustainability report for fiscal year 2006, which ended
Feb. 3, outlines the company's progress on environmental and social
measurements and was issued today in conjunction with the Coalition of
Environmentally Responsible Economies (CERES) conference here.
Major achievements for the company's recently completed fiscal year
include:
-- Launch of the company's first high-volume,
RoHS-compliant(a)desktop motherboards. Dell exceeded its goal of shipping
three million of these motherboards per quarter by the fourth quarter of
2005.
-- Recovery of 36.1 million kilograms nearly 40,000 tons) of product
for reuse or recycling from customers and company operations. More than
half of this total came from customers, increasing Dell's recovery of
product from customers by 72 percent over fiscal year 2005 volumes.
-- Completion of Dell's Supplier Self Assessment Questionnaire by 90
percent of targeted suppliers, exceeding the goal of 50 percent of target
group completing self assessment.
-- Participation by nearly halfof Dell's approximately 60,000
employees worldwide in Global Community Involvement Month benefiting
communities in which Dell has a presence around the globe.
"Dell is committed to being an environmentally and socially
responsible market leader and our public goals and annual reporting on
global progress underscore this focus," said Tod Arbogast of Dell's
sustainable business group. "We made significant progress against our
goals last year and have identified areas in which we can extend that
performance over the coming year."
"Dell's sustainability report is a significant and commendable step
forward in reporting on the quality of management beyond the balance
sheet. Often it is in the management of governance, environmental, and
stakeholder relations and metrics that we get critical insights into the
warp and woof of corporate governance. Dell clearly understands that its
investors are seeking those important insights," said Dr. Julie Fox Gorte,
vice president and chief social investment strategist for Calvert Group.
Design for Environment
Earlier this year, Dell issued a new chemical-use policy outlining the
company's precautionary approach to help identify and eliminate substances
of concern from its products. The policy includes a commitment to phase
out the use of all brominated flame retardants in products. To demonstrate
this commitment, Dell is currently chairing an industry working group
through the International Electronic Manufacturing Initiative (iNEMI) to
identify safe, reliable substitutes for the use of tetrabromobisphenol-A
(TBBP-A) in printed circuit boards. In addition, Dell plans to expand its
existing ban on the use of brominated flame retardants in desktop,
notebook, and server plastic parts to include all Dell products and
peripherals developed after June 1, 2006.
Dell also reaffirmed its commitment to meet the requirements of the
RoHS directive on products sold worldwide and to meet this July's deadline
of the directive for products sold in the European Union.
Meanwhile, in 2005 Dell exceeded its goal of shipping 3 million
RoHS-compliant(a), lead-free(b) desktop motherboards by more than 180
percent.
Dell will continue to enable power-management features on many desktop
and notebook products, in an effort to increase energy-conservation options
for customers. Dell began to offer its PowerEdge and PowerEdge SC servers
featuring processors with Enhanced Intel(R) SpeedStep(R) (EIST) capability
in certain configurations to help lower overall power consumption in 2005.
Dell estimates that 7 percent of PowerEdge and PowerEdge SC servers
shipped in 2006 were configured with EIST features enabled, providing
customers with the potential to save an average of 25 percent in power
consumption.
"We continue to meet goals on eliminating the use of substances of
concern from our product designs and increasing energy efficiency of our
products while maintaining our high standards of reliability and product
safety," said Don Brown, senior manager of environmental affairs for
Dell.
Asset Recovery Services (ARS)
Dell increased product recovered from customers for reuse or
recycling, as measured by weight, by 72 percent compared to 2005 results.
Dell has set a target to recover 125 million kilograms cumulatively by the
end of 2009, nearly three times as much as Dell recovered this year.
Dell committed to launch customer product recovery services in Latin
America and China this year. The planned launch of these additional asset
recovery programs will help enable the company to meet its goals.
"Dell is committed to making product recovery as convenient and easy
as product purchase for customers while we grow our network of responsible
product recovery vendors," said Jake Player, senior manager of asset
recovery services for Dell.
Information on Dell's environmental initiatives and a copy of the new
sustainability report are available at www.dell.com/sustainabilityreport.
In addition, information on Dell's global corporate responsibility efforts
is available at www.dell.com/commitment.
About Dell
Dell Inc. (NASDAQ:DELL) listens to customers and delivers innovative
technology and services they trust and value. Uniquely enabled by its
direct business model, Dell sells more systems globally than any computer
company, placing it No. 25 on the Fortune 500.
Company revenue for the last four quarters was $56 billion. For more
information, visit www.dell.com. To get
Dell news direct, visit www.dell.com/RSS.
(a) Meets the requirements of the EU Directive on the Restriction of
the use of certain Hazardous Substances dated January 27, 2003.
(b) Per the EU Directive on the Restriction of the use of certain
Hazardous Substances directive, this system (chassis and factory installed
components) or configuration contains less than 0.1% lead by weight.
Copyright Business Wire 2006
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