Environmental pollution is now a very big concern for almost everyone including smartphone companies like Samsung, Apple and others. Their yearly manufacturing runs into hundreds of millions of products and all of them leave behind carbon footprints. With focus on making things environmentally sustainable in an effort to slow down climate change, how exactly do the iconic companies deal with the problem? With several smartphone launches every year, it is very important to know about the steps the companies are taking for environmental sustainability. Apple in the month of September launched the iPhone 14 series and people who are using it can know that one iPhone 14, generates roughly 61 kg of carbon in its lifetime— that is equivalent to a single drive from Washington DC to Philadelphia.
Now, if 61 kg carbon footprint is released by one Apple iPhone 14 in its lifetime, imagine, what if we apply to the 237 million iPhones Apple shipped in 2021, and those emissions climb to 15 million metric tons, five times more than Washington DC's annual emissions from fossil fuels. Like so many aspects of our daily lives, from cheeseburgers to cars to new clothes, scale is the difference between negligible climate cost and noticeable climate footprint.
According to Apple's Product Environmental Report for the iPhone 14 Pro, the device releases 65 kg carbon emissions in its life cycle against 69 kg CO2e released by iPhone 13 Pro. The report further informed that the iPhone 14 Pro is made up of 100 percent recycled gold in the wire of all cameras, and 100 percent recycled rare Earth elements in all magnets. The device consumes 54 percent less energy than the U.S. Department of Energy requirements for battery charger systems.
Apple has also
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