Apple
Looks For Global Supply Chain to Decarbonize by 2030
October 26, 2022
The
company accelerates work with suppliers to decarbonize Apple-related production,
and expands investments in clean energy and climate solutions around the world
Apple
today called on its global supply chain to take new steps to address their
greenhouse gas emissions and take a comprehensive approach to decarbonization.
The company will evaluate the work of its major manufacturing partners to
decarbonize their Apple-related operations — including running on 100 percent
renewable electricity — and will track yearly progress. Apple has been carbon
neutral for its global corporate operations since 2020, and is laser-focused on
its ambitious goal to become carbon neutral across its entire global supply
chain and the life cycle of every product.
As the
impacts of climate change are increasingly felt around the world, Apple also
announced new initiatives and investments aimed at helping decarbonize the
global economy and promote innovative climate solutions for communities. These
include significant investments in renewable energy in Europe, partnerships to
support businesses transitioning to clean energy, and new support for projects
that advance natural carbon removal and community-driven climate solutions
around the world.
“Fighting
climate change remains one of Apple’s most urgent priorities, and moments like
this put action to those words,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “We’re looking
forward to continued partnership with our suppliers to make Apple’s supply chain
carbon neutral by 2030. Climate action at Apple doesn’t stop at our doors, and
in this work, we’re determined to be a ripple in the pond that creates a bigger
change.”
Mobilizing Supply Chain Climate Action
As part
of Apple’s supplier engagement, the company is partnering with its worldwide
supply chain to urge accelerated action to achieve carbon neutrality for their
Apple-related corporate operations. The company requires reporting on progress
toward these goals — specifically Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions reductions
related to Apple production — and will track and audit annual progress. Apple
will partner with suppliers that are working with urgency and making measurable
progress toward decarbonization.
Additionally, Apple is encouraging suppliers to address the greenhouse gas
emissions beyond their Apple production, prioritizing clean energy. As part of
the company’s work to achieve its 2030 goal, Apple has reduced its emissions by
40 percent since 2015, largely through improvements in energy efficiency,
low-carbon design, becoming carbon neutral for corporate operations, and
transitioning its supply chain to renewable electricity.
More than 200 suppliers representing more than 70 percent of Apple’s direct
manufacturing spend have already committed to using clean power like wind or
solar for all Apple production. Major manufacturing partners — including Corning
Incorporated, Nitto Denko Corporation, SK hynix, STMicroelectronics, TSMC, and
Yuto — have committed to power all Apple production with 100 percent renewable
energy.
To help
suppliers meet their commitments and go even further, Apple offers a suite of
free e-learning resources and live trainings through its Clean Energy Program,
and works closely with its suppliers and local partners to identify effective
solutions for renewable energy and carbon removal. More than 150 supplier
representatives have participated in live trainings this year alone. Apple plans
to donate these resources to create a first-of-its-kind public training platform
that is free for businesses across many different industries, ensuring that
companies of all sizes — in Apple’s supply chain and beyond — will have access
to the resources and advocacy networks needed to speed their transition to 100
percent clean energy and carbon neutrality.
Expanding Clean Energy to Address Customer Product Use
As part
of Apple’s commitment to clean energy, the company has sourced renewable energy
to power all of its corporate offices, retail stores, and data centers in 44
countries since 2018, and its suppliers have brought more than 10 gigawatts of
clean power online around the world. Building on this progress, Apple plans to
facilitate the construction of large-scale solar and wind projects in Europe,
with projects ranging between 30 and 300 megawatts — following an initial
request for proposals issued earlier this year. Over the next several years, the
company aims to procure enough renewable energy to power all Apple devices on
the continent with low-carbon electricity, while continuing to power corporate
offices, retail stores, and data centers with 100 percent clean energy. In
total, the planned investments will add 3,000 gigawatt hours per year of new
renewable energy on the grid.
The
European investments are part of the company’s larger strategy to address the
approximately 22 percent of its carbon footprint that comes from the electricity
customers use to charge their devices. Wherever possible, Apple plans to bring
clean energy projects online in grids with high carbon intensity, enhancing the
impact on Europe’s electricity sector at a time when renewable generation is
critically needed. Earlier this year, the company announced new renewable energy
projects in the United States and Australia designed to address customer product
use.
Customers
in the United States can now play a role in decreasing the carbon footprint of
iPhone with Clean Energy Charging. Available starting this month in the United
States through iOS 16, the new feature looks at the sources of the electricity
during expected charge times and optimizes for when the grid is using cleaner
energy sources like solar or wind. To continue to advance climate-smart
decision-making for customers, employees, and partners, Apple has joined the
University of California, Berkeley’s CoolClimate Network, a research partnership
to motivate and empower individuals and organizations to make low-carbon
choices.
Advancing Equitable and Financially Viable Climate Solutions Around the World
Apple
today also announced three new projects through the Restore Fund, a
first-of-its-kind carbon removal initiative that aims to generate a financial
return while removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. In partnership with
Conservation International and Goldman Sachs, Apple has invested with three
high-quality forestry managers in Brazil and Paraguay to restore 150,000 acres
of sustainably certified working forests and protect around 100,000 acres of
native forests, grasslands, and wetlands.
Together,
these initial forestry projects are forecast to remove 1 million metric tons of
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in 2025. To ensure accurate monitoring,
reporting, and verification of the projects’ carbon removal impact, Apple is
working with partners to analyze satellite imagery and deploy innovative remote
sensing technologies.
As Apple
continues to make progress reducing emissions by 75 percent by 2030, the company
prioritizes high-quality nature-based solutions for the 25 percent of remaining
emissions that are unavoidable with existing technologies. At the same time,
Apple is working to spur entirely new solutions, including through support for
analysis by Carbon Direct identifying pathways for developing sustainable
aviation fuels.
In
addition to the Restore Fund projects, Apple today announced new partnerships to
advance community-driven climate solutions around the world:
In
Namibia and Zimbabwe, Apple is working with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) to
promote climate resilience and sustainable livelihoods through the Climate Crowd
program. Climate Crowd works hand in hand with communities facing the worst
impacts of climate change to build resilience and develop alternative
livelihoods that depend on the preservation and restoration of natural resources
in the region — from climate-smart agriculture to beekeeping and rainwater
harvesting. In this region, the program also supports interventions like clean
cookstoves that help communities get the critical energy resources they need
without depleting the natural resources around them.
In
China, Apple has partnered with China Green Carbon Foundation to conduct
research, demonstrate best practices, and build stakeholder networks around the
goal of increasing the amount and quality of responsibly managed nature-based
carbon sinks. The partnership will support identifying and mapping prioritized
areas in the Sichuan province, as well as developing best practice guidelines
and methods for forest management that could be replicated in other regions.
Apple will also support a pilot in Chengdu to demonstrate carbon removal
potential in urban and semi-urban areas, which will help establish best
practices for carrying out carbon removal projects in urban areas of China, and
improve climate adaptation and resilience.
In
the Chyulu Hills region of Kenya, Apple has partnered with Conservation
International since 2020 to demonstrate that improved livestock management can
help restore crucial rangelands, store carbon, and build climate-resilient
pastoral livelihoods across Africa. To date, the project has trained hundreds of
local Maasai community members in updated rangeland management techniques,
including more sustainable grazing practices, reduction of soil erosion, natural
regeneration, and the creation of women-led grass seed banks.
In
Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa, Apple is launching a new partnership
with ChangemakerXchange to strengthen climate action and leadership in the
region. By creating a network to connect, build, and uplift youth-led climate
innovation, Apple will help link solutions to funding opportunities and enhance
climate leadership skills. The initiative will launch in Egypt at the UN
Conference on Climate Change (COP27), and over the next two years will support a
group of 100 change-makers and social innovators — 50 from Europe and 50 from
the Middle East and North Africa.