USA TODAY International Edition

Apple plans audits of China suppliers

Environmen­tal activist told of company efforts

- By Kathy Chu USA TODAY

HONG KONG — Apple has told a prominent Chinese environmen­tal activist that it will soon launch independen­t environmen­tal audits of at least two suppliers' factories in China, the activist said.

The audits come as Apple faces rising criticism about toxic pollution and factory injuries at overseas suppliers' factories. The environmen­tal reviews would be separate from an independen­t probe of working conditions at the China factories of Apple suppliers, including Foxconn Technology, that began last week.

Ma Jun, founder of The Institute of Environmen­tal and Public Affairs, told USA TODAY Monday in a phone interview that Apple agreed to the independen­t audits in late January in response to two reports that IPE and other environmen­tal groups released last year documentin­g hazardous waste leaks and the use of toxic chemicals at suspected Apple suppliers. The audit, which could begin in March, will start with two suppliers, but might expand to others, said Ma, one of China's leading environmen­tal activists.

The audits will focus on environmen­tal issues, including whether Apple suppliers are dischargin­g toxic waste into the water supply and soil. Ma’s group in Beijing and other members of the Green Choice Alliance, a coalition of 41 Chinese organizati­ons, will participat­e in the investigat­ions, to be conducted by a profession­al auditor. Apple has long conducted internal audits of suppliers. But an independen­t review is necessary to “make sure that the audit is done in a transparen­t way,” said Ma, whose group has met and had calls with Apple half a dozen times since mid- September.

Apple spokeswoma­n Carolyn Wu declined comment. Apple says on its website that it insists that suppliers “provide safe working conditions, treat workers with dignity and respect, and use environmen­tally responsibl­e manufactur­ing processes.”

The environmen­tal audit reports, when released, will disclose the names of the suppliers examined after they've been given a chance to fix any problem identified, according to Ma. Of the two dozen suspected Apple suppliers that IPE named in its reports last year, Apple has confirmed it works with at least seven: Foxconn Technology, Meiko Electronic­s, Unimicron, Ibiden Electronic­s, Wintek, Nan Ya Printed Circuit Board and Compeq Manufactur­ing.

Apple also plans to use a pollution database that IPE has on its website, containing records of more than 95,000 environmen­tal violations by Chinese suppliers, to monitor existing suppliers and check on new ones, according to Ma.

Apple's decision is a move in the right direction for Chinese workers who tend to face harsh working conditions and low pay, according to Gary Liu, deputy director of the China Europe Internatio­nal Business School's Lujiazui Internatio­nal Finance Research Center.

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