HPE Accelerates Net-zero Climate Target by 10 Years
June 23, 2022

Hewlett Packard Enterprise unveiled its
annual Living Progress Report for fiscal
year 2021, demonstrating the company’s ongoing
commitment to creating a more equitable and sustainable world by
accelerating targets for net-zero emissions, developing
technology solutions that drive a low-carbon economy, investing
in a diverse and inclusive workforce and operating its business
with and insisting on the highest ethical standards.
“We don’t just help our customers meet their ESG goals, we
continue to push ourselves and our entire industry forward by
improving upon our own,” said Antonio Neri, President and CEO.
“At HPE, we have a significant responsibility and an
intentional, focused plan to help our customers, suppliers and
communities successfully transition to a zero-carbon future.”
Charting a course towards net-zero emissions
HPE’s seventh annual report reaffirms HPE’s promise to become a
net-zero enterprise across its entire value chain, accelerating
its target date by 10 years from 2050 to 2040. This commitment
is backed by a new suite of targets that are consistent with a
1.5-degree Centigrade climate pathway and approved by the
Science-based Target Initiative. By 2030, HPE pledges to reduce
emissions within its own operations by 70% from 2020 levels,
building on the 62% reduction already achieved over the five
prior years. HPE will also reduce Scope 3 emissions by 42%,
focusing on the use of sold products, upstream transportation
and distribution, and direct supply chain emissions. By 2040,
the company plans to reduce its entire global footprint by 90%.
To advance accountability to reach these new goals, HPE has
introduced two new initiatives that will drive ESG progress at
the leadership level:
In 2022, all Vice President and above leaders will complete a
mandatory climate training program with the aim of empowering
leaders to create action plans within their organizations that
mitigate climate impact.
Additionally, HPE has introduced a new compensation metric for
members of its Executive Committee that ties a portion of
variable pay to HPE’s management of carbon emissions across its
value chain.
As-a-service transition empowers customers to operate
sustainably and efficiently
HPE’s transition to a consumption-based, as-a-service company is
driving sustainable transformation efforts for its customers.
With the HPE GreenLake edge-to-cloud platform, customers can
flexibly scale their IT to meet their needs, thereby improving
utilization levels and avoiding the waste of overprovisioning.
Customers transitioning to HPE GreenLake from traditional CapEx
models can achieve a greater than 30% reduction in energy costs
and total cost of ownership. For example, Auckland Transport
(AT), which records traffic across New Zealand, transitioned its
video management system to the HPE GreenLake edge-to-cloud
platform. In doing so, AT was able to pay for only the cloud
services they used, add 60% more cameras to their system, and
reduce their energy consumption 37%.
In addition to helping customers transition to as a service
models, HPE is committed to technology reuse: 85% of the three
million technology assets taken in from customers is reused. To
help customers measure and manage their impact, HPEFS customers,
and now selected partners’ customers1,can receive an HPE
Circular Economy report that details how their IT assets were
processed and the associated environmental savings from those
services, which can be used for Scope 3 carbon disclosure
reporting.
Across its entire business, HPE works directly with customers to
help them improve the efficiency and sustainability of their
technology operations to meet their business needs. These
uniquely customized engagements contributed to approximately
$891 million in new net revenue for 2021, an increase of more
than 185% in the last three years. In addition, in 2021,
approximately 50% of HPE solutions had sustainability and
efficiency attributes.
Building a diverse, engaged and inclusive culture
HPE continues to advance principles of diversity, equity and
inclusion both within its workforce and beyond. In 2021, HPE met
its annual target of increasing representation of both women and
ethnically diverse talent. Representation of women in the
workforce increased by 1% year-over-year, with increased
representation at every level worldwide, exceeding goals in both
technical and executive roles. HPE also increased representation
of all underrepresented minorities in the U.S. by 1.6% overall.
In 2022 HPE continued to make progress in its efforts to
identify and address pay disparities that may impact women and
underrepresented minorities. As a result, HPE is proud that
women in the U.S., U.K. and India – representing a majority of
our workforce footprint – earn $1.00 for every $1.00 earned by
their male counterparts when accounting for legitimate business
factors such as job title, time in role, experience and
location. The same is true of underrepresented minorities in the
U.S., and to the company intends to ensure the same level of
progress throughout the rest of the world as it moves forward
with future pay reviews.
Operating with the highest ethical standards
HPE’s commitment to winning the right way in the marketplace
extends beyond our operations into the development, deployment
and use of its products and solutions. One example is product
security. HPE remains the only company offering Commercial
National Security Algorithm Suite (CNSA), the most advanced
encryption for server platforms. In 2021, HPE introduced Project
Aurora, which extends its secure root of trust and verification
processes to deliver cloud-native, zero trust security to its
edge-to-cloud architecture.
Additionally, in 2021, HPE launched its Artificial Intelligence
(AI) Ethics Principles to support the responsible development,
deployment and use of artificial intelligence. These principles
inform product development, partnerships, and the internal use
of third-party AI to support business operations.
HPE
has also created more stringent supply chain responsibility
targets in the last year to ensure its products are ethically
sourced. By 2030, HPE aims for:
100% of HPE suppliers being committed to the employer pays
principle in recruitment (98% of supplier spend)
100% of major HPE suppliers training their workers on human
rights (95% of supplier spend)
100% of HPE tier 1 and 2 supplier sites having effective
grievance processes for employees |