IT must become green and fair
Campaigners are protesting at the opening of the ‘GreenIT’ conference at the CeBIT IT fair in Hannover.
04-03-2008
Members of the makeITfair and PC global campaign are protesting against degrading working conditions in the global IT industry and unresolved environmental problems in the production and disposal of IT gadgets. One topic of this year’s CeBIT, the largest international IT fair, is ‘Green IT’, with a clear focus on energy efficiency and climate change.
“Energy efficiency and innovative IT solutions for reduced CO2
emissions are important activities, but not enough to make the IT
industry green and fair,” says Cornelia Heydenreich from Germanwatch,
one of the German members of makeITfair. “The social and environmental
implications of the whole life cycle of IT gadgets, from the sourcing
of minerals through to the production and the disposal of IT goods must
be taken into account.”
Sarah Bormann from the NGO WEED is the project leader of the PC global
initiative, which is looking at the environmental and economic impact
of IT. She says: “Today’s action raises awareness about the
environmental costs of IT production, which are unequally distributed
in the world. Residents and workers in developing countries, where
mining of resources and the production and disposal of IT gadgets takes
place, are unfairly affected. If the IT industry truly wants to talk
about Green IT at CeBIT today, they also have to think about the impact
their industry is making on people and the environment in poor
countries.”
The global electronics industry consumes a growing proportion of the
world’s precious and rare metals. In South Africa, local communities
have been forced to leave their farmland without proper compensation to
make way for the growing number of platinum mines supplying the
computer industry. “The studies from makeITfair point out direct links
between problematic African mines and component manufacturers in Asia
that supply many of the biggest electronics brands,” says Cornelia
Heydenreich.
The new documentary ‘Digital handcraft. Chinese computer factories for
the world market’, which will be published soon by WEED, reveals
terrible working conditions in IT production: long working hours, low
wages, no trade union representation and health problems are the most
pressing issues in this industry. “The short life cycles of IT hardware
are not only causing a dramatic e-waste problem, but also precarious
working conditions with extreme overtime and imminent mass dismissals,”
says Sarah Bormann.
WEED and makeITfair are urging electronics companies to take
responsibility for working conditions and environmental impacts within
the whole IT supply chain. We are calling for the production of truly
fair products to be presented at next year’s CeBIT.
| Website: | www.makeitfair.org |
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