HP 2015 Sustainability Report

Introduction

Environment

Society

Integrity

About this report

Endnotes Introduction

Executive summary 1 Packaging is the box that comes with the product and all paper (including packaging and materials) inside the box. 2 Emissions intensity of HP’s product portfolio refers to tonnes CO 2 e/net revenue arising from use of more than 95% of HP product units shipped each year, including notebooks, tablets, desktops, mobile computing devices, and workstations; and HP inkjet, HP LaserJet, and DesignJet printers, and scanners. Expressed as emissions generated per unit of output, based on anticipated usage. For personal systems products, this reflects energy consumed by each product unit during customer use. For printing products, this reflects energy and paper consumed to print each page. Through 2015, progress against this goal equaled a 17% reduction. 3 Intensity is calculated as suppliers’ GHG emissions divided by Hewlett-Packard Company's annual revenue. This method normalizes performance based on business productivity. Intensity is reported as a three-year rolling average. Production supplier GHG emissions include Scope 1 and Scope 2. Data is through December 2014, the most recent year data is available. 4 Emissions intensity of the Hewlett-Packard Company product portfolio refers to tonnes CO 2 e/net revenue arising from use of high-volume product lines, including notebooks, tablets, desktops, mobile computing devices, and workstations; inkjet and HP LaserJet printers; and Hewlett-Packard Company servers, including industry- standard servers, as well as Hewlett-Packard Company Moonshot and Hewlett-Packard Company Apollo. 5 Expressed as emissions generated per unit of output. Reflective of the Hewlett-Packard Company product portfolio prior to separation. Calculations for personal systems are based on energy use—measured as emissions per unit (a single device). Calculations for printers include energy use, paper, ink, and toner cartridges—measured as emissions per unit (a single device). Calculations for servers are based on energy use, measured as emissions per unit of work (a task performed by the system, as defined by industry standards). 6 Percentage of total 3TG facilities reported to Hewlett-Packard Company that were either Conflict-Free Smelter Program compliant or in process to become compliant, and/or that we reasonably believe exclusively source conflict minerals from recycled or scrap sources or from outside of the Covered Countries (as of April 2016). 7 Social investments include all grants made to nonprofit organizations from Hewlett-Packard Company and the Hewlett-Packard Company Foundation, plus the valuation of employee volunteer hours. Data excludes contributions to the Hewlett-Packard Company Foundation and employee donations but includes Hewlett-Packard Company’s matching contributions and contributions from the Hewlett-Packard Company Foundation to other organizations. 8 As of February 2016. Our footprint 1 HP calculates emissions intensity as its suppliers’ reported GHG emissions divided by HP’s annual revenue. This method normalizes performance based on business productivity. See Supply chain environmental impact for details. 2 Emissions intensity of the Hewlett-Packard Company product portfolio refers to tonnes CO 2 e/net revenue arising from use of high-volume product lines, including notebooks, tablets, desktops, mobile computing devices, and workstations; inkjet and HP LaserJet printers; and Hewlett-Packard Company servers, including industry- standard servers, as well as Hewlett-Packard Company Moonshot and Hewlett-Packard Company Apollo. 3 Expressed as emissions generated per unit of output. Reflective of the Hewlett-Packard Company product portfolio prior to separation. Calculations for personal systems are based on energy use—measured as emissions per unit (a single device). Calculations for printers include energy use, paper, ink, and toner cartridges—measured as emissions per unit (a single device). Calculations for servers are based on energy use, measured as emissions per unit of work (a task performed by the system, as defined by industry standards). 4 Emissions intensity of HP’s product portfolio refers to tonnes CO 2 e/net revenue arising from use of more than 95% of HP product units shipped each year, including notebooks, tablets, desktops, mobile computing devices, and workstations; and HP inkjet, HP LaserJet, and DesignJet printers, and scanners. We express emissions intensity as emissions generated per unit of output, based on anticipated usage. For personal systems products, this reflects energy consumed by each product unit during customer use. For printing products, this reflects energy and paper consumed to print each page. Supply chain environmental impact 1 HP uses the terms “production suppliers,” “product transportation suppliers,” and “nonproduction suppliers” throughout this report. “Production suppliers” provide materials and components for our product manufacturing and also assemble HP products. “Product transportation suppliers” provide services for the shipping and delivery of HP products. “Nonproduction suppliers” provide goods and services that do not go into the production of HP products (such as staffing, telecommunications, and travel). Company profile 1 As of November 2015. Environment

151 HP 2015 Sustainability Report

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