BY LINDSEY
WOLF
ANCHOR JIM
FLINK
In honor of
Earth Day, Greenpeace released a study alleging the world’s largest tech
companies really aren’t that green. San
Francisco ’s KGO
explains.
“The environmental organization criticizes several companies including Apple, Facebook and Twitter for the enormous amounts of energy they use and calls them to commit to using clean renewable energy sources.”
And the dirtiest of them all according to green activists? Apple.
“The environmental organization criticizes several companies including Apple, Facebook and Twitter for the enormous amounts of energy they use and calls them to commit to using clean renewable energy sources.”
And the dirtiest of them all according to green activists? Apple.
The main culprit appears to be the company’s 500,000 square-foot data center in
"Apple's decision to locate its iDataCenter in North Carolina … indicates a lack of a corporate commitment to clean energy supply for its cloud operations … [I]n addition to tax incentives, access to inexpensive energy, regardless of its source, is a key driver in Apple's site selection."
To the contrary, on its website, Apple highlights how small their carbon footprint is.
“Apple is committed to ensuring that working conditions in our supply chain are safe … and manufacturing processes are environmentally responsible.”
But a blogger for ZDNet argues - should the environment be the first thing on these tech giants’ minds? Or should they focus on - well - technology?
“I do believe the cloud computing could be more inherently green than the current model, but I agree that energy efficiency shouldn’t be the only focus. These companies have the might to make a difference.”
So, who is this cleanest? Greenies say -- Yahoo! -- with a 56% clean energy index. Sure, the search engine is eco-friendly, but it’s not doing too hot from a business standpoint.
“From a purely business perspective, none of this matters, of course. Yahoo, for example, may be among the greenest of cloud providers, but the company itself has been tanking.”
Another fun fact from the report: if cloud computing were a country, Greenpeace says, it would be the fifth-largest energy consumer in the world - behind
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