HP 2015 Sustainability Report

Introduction

Environment

Society

Integrity

About this report

22 Based on EPEAT 1680.1-2009 criteria. To claim this point, products must meet the following thresholds: cadmium (<50ppm), lead (<50ppm), hexavalent chromium (<500ppm), mercury (none in light sources), risk-phrase flame retardants (<0.1% of total weight for parts >25g), and PVC in large plastic parts (none in parts greater than 25g). 23 100% of commercial desktop models contain greater than 10% PCR plastic content when configured with a wireless keyboard.

24 energystar.gov . 25 See endnote 16.

26 The specific SKUs for the products rated by EPEAT at the Gold level are HP LaserJet Enterprise M506dn (F2A69A#201 and F2A69A#AAZ), HP LaserJet Pro M402dn (C5F94A # 201) HP LaserJet Enterprise Flow MFP M527c (F2AA81A#BGJ, F2AA81#AAZ, F2A81A#201), HP LaserJet Enterprise Flow, and MFP M527z (F2A78A#BGJ, F2A78A#AAZ, F2A78A#201). 27 Using the ENERGY STAR® program’s Typical Electricity Consumption (TEC) method, or as reported in energystar.gov as of July 2015. Actual results may vary. HP testing is based on using the default Sleep Timer setting for all products. Default Sleep Timer setting is 0 minutes for the HP LaserJet M506 series. Increasing the Sleep Timer setting longer than the default value can increase TEC. More information about test methodology can be found at: http://www8.hp.com/h20195/v2/GetDocument. aspx?docname=4AA6-1566ENW . 28 http://www8.hp.com/us/en/hp-news/press-release.html?id=1923205#.VjaFJrerQgs . 29 The CO 2 reduction was based on a comparison between HP LaserJet Enterprise 506dn and the predecessor product (HP LaserJet Enterprise P3015). CO 2 reduction for cartridges is reported per 1,000 pages printed (Kg CO 2 e/1,000 pages). 30 See endnote 17. 31 Energy claim and packaging waste claim based on testing comparisons of major competitors in default modes by Buyers Lab Inc., May 2016. 32 Based on internal life cycle assessment vs. HP LaserJet printers, May 2016. 33 Estimated energy and paper savings based on analysis of select HP Managed Print Services customers’ imaging and printing operations using data gathered on devices and paper consumption and comparing with post-MPS actuals or projections. Results depend on unique business environments, the way HP products and services are used, and other factors. Overall printing costs are unique to each company and should not be relied on for savings you may achieve. 34 Ibid. 35 As of March 2016. 36 Packaging is the box that comes with the product and all paper (including packaging and materials) inside the box. 37 Not all locations have suitable recycling infrastructure to recycle all materials used in HP packaging. 38 See endnote 36. 39 http://newlight.com/aircarbon/ . 40 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, 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. 41 See endnote 36.

Product return and recycling 1 It is impractical for HP to report the recycling rate by product category, as materials are not typically sorted at collection points. 2 As of May 2016.

Society

Supply chain responsibility 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). 2 “Conflict Minerals in the Compute Sector: Estimating Extent of Tin, Tantalum, Tungsten, and Gold Use in ICT Products.” Colin Fitzpatrick, Elsa Olivetti, T. Reed Miller, Richard Roth, and Randolph Kirchain. Environmental Science & Technology . December 2014.

Employees 1 As of November 2015. 2 As of February 2016.

3 For an employee activity to be considered volunteering, it needs to serve the public good, be conducted through a formal or informal organization that is not for profit, and be unpaid. HP employee volunteering can be conducted during paid work time, including as part of a department or team service project, or on an employee’s own time. It can also include time related to making a cash or goods donation such as shopping for toys that will be donated, giving blood, or walking for a charitable cause.

153 HP 2015 Sustainability Report

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