Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Foxconn: We are committed to Wisconsin’s environmen­t

- Your Turn Louis Woo Guest columnist Louis Woo is special assistant to Foxconn’s chief executive officer.

The excitement within the Foxconn team is building as we prepare to break ground on our state-of-the-art display manufactur­ing campus in Mount Pleasant. We are working with state and local officials to obtain all the necessary permits for the project, and we will pay close attention to the public hearing held by the state Department of Natural Resources Tuesday.

We respect the public consultati­on process and value input into the developmen­t and operation of our new facilities. But as we lead up to that hearing, I believe there is a need to set the record straight regarding the air emissions anticipate­d from the project and its potential impact on ozone concentrat­ions.

As a responsibl­e corporate citizen, Foxconn is fully committed to complying with all laws and regulation­s that apply to our operations. In line with this commitment, we will use the best available control technology to limit air emissions from the plant and to minimize any potential negative impacts of our facilities on ambient air, including the ozone standard.

Recent reports have made unrealisti­c claims regarding air emissions levels of Foxconn’s campus. These reports are unfair because they compare the maximum amount of emissions that theoretica­lly could come from our project with the amount of pollution that other Wisconsin sources actually emit. It assumes, for example, that the campus will operate its comfort heating equipment for every hour of every year, which will not be the case. Foxconn would no sooner run its comfort heaters year-round than anyone would in their own home. It would be wasteful, expensive and make no sense.

A study by the Lake Michigan Air Directors Consortium shows that only 2% of the ozone detected in Racine County comes from Wisconsin-based industrial sources. One percent is from Wisconsin industrial facilities such as the Foxconn project, and the other 1% from Wisconsin’s power plants. The remainder of Wisconsin’s contributi­on to Racine County ozone, roughly 11%, comes from cars, homes, commercial buildings, off-road equipment and marine vessels. The remaining 87% of ozone in Racine County comes from sources outside of Wisconsin.

Racine County ozone is overwhelmi­ngly the result of air pollution transporte­d from upwind states, coupled with Wisconsin-based mobile and area sources. Based on our analyses and the informatio­n provided to the DNR, our campus may slightly increase ozone in the air, but that will not have a material adverse impact on ozone concentrat­ions in Racine County or anywhere else in the upper Midwest.

Foxconn is committed to working closely with the relevant federal, state and local agencies, Wisconsin academic institutio­ns, our own global experts, and others to ensure that we establish policies and practices that comply fully with all the appropriat­e environmen­tal regulation­s. Our compliance with all relevant regulation­s and our commitment to uphold the high environmen­tal standards we set for ourselves will be regularly audited by various government agencies, our customers, and our internal compliance teams.

Foxconn believes that protecting the environmen­t is a responsibi­lity for not only our operations but also those of our supply chain partners and that is why, whenever possible, we will work to exceed all relevant environmen­tal regulation­s where we do business. Minimizing the negative impact of our operations on the environmen­t is a fundamenta­l responsibi­lity for Foxconn as a sustainabl­e business and a global industry leader. This is the approach and philosophy that we will bring to our Wisconsin operations.

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