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Energy Insights: Energy News: What do tech companies know that you donft know about being green?

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What do tech companies know that you donft know about being green?


22-09-2009

 

By Heather Clancy

It strikes me as particularly intriguing that four out of the top five companies on a new gGreenest Big Companiesh listed published in the latest Newsweek are also four of the biggest technology companies in the world. They are Hewlett-Packard (No. 1), Dell (No. 2), Intel (No. 4) and IBM (No. 5).

The third, Johnson & Johnson, is the venerable healthcare and pharmaceutical products company (or HABA producer, as we used to say when I was a supermarket cashier in high school).

What do these companies have on yours? Well, the ranking was pulled together by using data from several different organizations. They included Trucost, which works for non-profit organization NSF International on environmental measurement and reporting. More than 700 different metrics are used by Trucost to calculate corporate environmental impact. KLD Research & Analytics provided what Newsweek describes as a gGreen Policies Score,h which essentially involves a more qualitative analysis. Data was also pulled in from CorporateRegister.com. The Newsweek rankings are a weighted average of all these scores. Companies could get 45 percent each for Environmental Impact and Green Policies, that got 10 percent for their reputation survey standing.

OK, so I get the choice of HP. But 100 percent, guys? Is ANY company really 100 percent? I beg to differ, unless youfre hoping that next yearfs g100 score will again raise the bar. Incidentally, dear readers, Dell is barely a point behind with a 98.87 Green Score, while Johnson & Johnson snagged a 98.56 weighed average Green Score.

Incidentally, the highest ranked consumer products company on the list is Nike, which 93.28. Wal-Mart, which is held up by oodles of people as a leader in corporate sustainability initiatives, wound up at No. 59. Is Green Score was 80.38.

Want to read more, youfll have to visit the Newsweek site, because I donft have all the data. Herefs the link to the report.

www.smartplanet.com

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