December 2004
Xerox Sees Success in 10th
Annual Environment, Health and Safety Report
Stamford, CT— Totaling
up the waste saved from landfill, the energy
not consumed, the air and water pollution
prevented and the injuries avoided - all through
positive initiatives - Xerox Corporation celebrated
the success of its Environment, Health and
Safety program in its 10th annual progress
report, even as the company looked ahead to
future challenges.
Results cited in the 2004 report
are:
-
Xerox has kept more than
1.5 billion pounds of waste out of landfills
since 1991 by taking back and remanufacturing
copiers and printers that have reached their
end of life and by reusing or recycling
parts from them. That weight is equivalent
to a line of more than 88,000 school buses
stretching for 550 miles. Last year alone,
the company prevented 161 million pounds
of materials from entering landfills, through
reuse and recycling of Xerox equipment and
supplies.
-
Xerox made possible energy
savings of nearly 1.5 million megawatt hours
of electricity in 2003 through selling office
products that meet the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s ENERGY STAR(R)
criteria and by remanufacturing and reusing
parts, a process that requires less energy
than processing raw materials to make new
parts. In total, energy saved through ENERGY
STAR product features and equipment remanufacturing
is enough to light nearly 1.2 million U.S.
homes for a year. Since Xerox joined the
EPA’s program as a Charter Partner
in 1993, more than 260 Xerox copier, printer,
fax and multifunction systems have earned
the ENERGY STAR.
-
In 2003, manufacturing,
research and development, and equipment
recovery-recycle operations that Xerox operates
in 11 countries around the world generated
a total of 16,800 tons of hazardous waste.
Ninety-seven percent of that was beneficially
managed through treatment, recycling or
energy recovery through fuels blending.
In 2003, Xerox facilities released 68 tons
of chemicals and particulates to the air.
This was a 20 percent decrease from 2002,
primarily due to production declines.
The gains documented in this
annual accounting result from a visionary
environmental, health and safety policy Xerox
established more than a decade ago. It committed
the company to high standards worldwide. And
it pledged that the company would operate
in a manner that would safeguard health, protect
the environment, conserve valuable materials
and resources, and minimize the risk of asset
losses - tenets that would not be compromised
for economic considerations.
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