Friday, October 28, 2022

Big tech’s dirty supply chains undercut climate promises from HQ

Taiwan's TSMC is the sole producer of Apple’s Silicon processors that go into iPhones, iPads and Macs.
PHOTO: REUTERS

TAIPEI – Amazon.com, Microsoft and Alphabet have pledged to run their own operations on 100 per cent clean power. But their suppliers – the lesser known companies that make the key components of hit products like the Kindle, the Xbox or Pixel mobiles – remain deeply reliant on fossil fuels.

Twelve of the 14 top suppliers get on average 5.4 per cent of their energy from renewable sources or don’t disclose, data from a Greenpeace report released on Friday showed.

Their major clients, including HP, Dell Technologies, Lenovo Group, Sony, LG Electronics and Samsung Electronics share the blame, the organisation said.

Of 10 consumer electronics brands, only one – Apple – has designed an emissions strategy requiring its suppliers to achieve 100 per cent renewable energy by 2030.

The big consumer electronics brands “have not provided sufficient incentives or support for their suppliers to decarbonise”, Greenpeace’s researchers concluded. They “have failed to set meaningful renewable energy targets where it really counts – in their supply chains”.

Google, Sony and Dell declined to comment, while representatives from Microsoft, HP, Lenovo and LG didn’t respond to Bloomberg’s emailed requests for comment.

Amazon said it plans to power its operations with 100 per cent renewable energy by 2025 and to zero out its carbon emissions by 2040. Samsung said it was committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2050.

At the heart of their supply chains are Asian chip behemoths like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and SK Hynix that can guzzle as much power as entire countries to produce the advanced logic and memory chips that are now used in nearly everything.

While their products are indispensable, they use fossil fuels to generate much of their power. In 2021, TSMC and Hynix reported renewable energy usage rates of only 9 per cent and 4 per cent, respectively.

Greenpeace said that the 10 tech companies and 14 suppliers studied used more than 170,000 gigawatt hours of power last year, on par with the annual electricity consumption of Argentina.

By 2030, power used by the global tech sector is expected to be up 60 per cent over 2020. That threatens to create severe supply issues and raises environmental concerns in manufacturing hubs.

Taiwan’s TSMC is sucking up as much electricity as Sri Lanka’s 21-million population and is expected to use up 12.5 per cent of the island’s annual power consumption by 2025. More than half of Taiwan’s energy is generated from coal and fossil fuels.

In South Korea, home to another critical chip-supplier, SK Hynix, the story is similar. The company’s chip factories consume power equivalent to 1.6 million South Korean households and more than 60 per cent of the country’s power comes from burning coal and natural gas.

Apple is calling on its suppliers to address their greenhouse gas emissions, the company said in a statement on Tuesday. The Cupertino, California-based company will “evaluate the work of its major manufacturing partners to decarbonise their Apple-related operations – including running on 100 per cent renewable electricity – and will track yearly progress,” the firm said in the statement.

TSMC is the sole producer of Apple’s Silicon processors that go into iPhones, iPads and Macs, while Hynix is a key memory provider for the same devices. BLOOMBERG

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