'Green' Carrier ATandT Announces New Packaging Requirements
AT&T has announced new packaging requirements of its phone manufacturers. Slimmer boxes, recyclable materials, more efficient chargers and an avoidance of materials from conflict zones will all result, AT&T hopes, in some dollars and environmental good sense.
AT&T, which Juniper Research named the top "green" U.S. carrier in 2009,
is living up to its Earth-friendly reputation. On March 4, the carrier
announced that it's requiring slimmer packaging, and less of it, from
its mobile handset partners.
By improving the packaging of device chargers, cases, batteries and
data cables, AT&T hopes to eliminate 200 tons of plastic and paper
waste, freeing up 1,100 cubic yards of landfill space-a mass it
helpfully eyeballs as being the equivalent of nearly 10 school buses.
"These improvements are sound business decisions, but more importantly,
they significantly reduce the impact of this packaging on the
environment," Jeff Bradley, senior vice president of devices, said in a
statement. "This is a small but meaningful next step that AT&T
decided to take, and we are pleased to deliver new packaging
alternatives that are recycled, can be recycled and generate less
waste."
Manufacturers are expected to start getting on board with the
requirements this year-though the slackers and foot-draggers (no
kidding around now, guys, we mean it!) are expected to finally come
around by the end of 2011.
The requirements include: reducing packaging and using
non-petroleum-based inks and recycled materials for in-box materials;
that 75 percent of the devices be at least 65 percent recyclable; that
the majority of new devices comply with the energy-efficient GSMA
Universal Charging Solution; that all new devices comply with the
European Union's Restriction of Hazardous Substances mandate; and that
suppliers "assert" that they have "avoided" virgin materials mined from
conflict zones with the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
(Coltan, an ore, is apparently used in many electronics and is abundant in the Congo.)
"This is the beginning of an ongoing collaboration with our suppliers,
and we'll explore together more ways to soften our impact on the
environment," Bradley said.
Nokia
has been an early proponent of minimizing packaging, eliminating toxic
materials and boosting charger and device efficiency, and over the years has shown such moves to indeed be good business, as AT&T device providers are likely to discover.
For example, by minimizing the packaging of its handsets between 2006
and 2008, Nokia reports that it reduced the use of paper-based
materials by almost 100,000 tons, which resulted in a savings of
474 million Euros, or approximately $645 million. Further, because
the boxes were smaller, more could fit on each truck for transport,
enabling Nokia to eliminate the use of more than 12,000 trucks.
The
United Nations, noting that e-waste is most inclined to pose a hazard
to developing nations, released a Feb. 22 report, encouraging nations
to bring new urgency to addressing the problem.








