EPEAT(Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool)

Filed under: Ephemeral — Peter Hopton on March 9, 2010

EPEAT is a US standard, organised by the green electronics council. EPEAT is currently (at the time of writing) not legal for EU public sector procurement, there is case law against it. This is due to various mandatory EMS and environmental reporting requirements and some specifications that make it incompatible with EU regulations and drivers. EPEAT is a multi-tiered standard, which awards Bronze for a number of criteria (most of which are a legal requirement in the EU anyway), Silver and Gold are awarded for a number of optional criteria. However it should be noted that the optional criteria include key areas addressed by DEFRA as a minimum specification for green procurement (a mandatory minimum in UK central government), meaning that an EPEAT Gold product might not meet the minimum standard outlined by DEFRA. Some of the criteria aren’t quite inline with EU drivers, such as the elimination of carcinogenic fire retardants identified by the EU and DEFRA. www.epeat.net The last EPEAT specification for desktop PC’s was introduced in 2002/2003, making the standard quite old, a specification review is due and I’m working with the BCS DCSG to attempt to ‘EU-ise’ the standard to make it compatible with our way of doing things over here.

BroadLeaf First to Achieve Energy Saving Recommended’s Latest Specification

Filed under: Green IT — Peter Hopton on February 17, 2010

“Energy Saving Recommended”, it’s a badge we’re used to seeing on household appliances, triple glazing and loft insulation, but the scheme from the Energy Saving Trust also endorses energy efficient computer equipment.

The latest revision of the standard for PCs, which entered service in November requires equipment to significantly exceed the Energy Star standard and achieve an ultra-low consumption standby power mode. VeryPC are the first manufacturer to demonstrate that its products exceed the latest standard and may stand alone on the standard as soon as March. If the existing manufacturers can’t prove their products exceed the latest standard by 1st March, then our BroadLeaf range will be the only “Energy Saving Recommended” PCs available on the market!

Information Technology in typical commercial businesses accounts for 40% of their total electricity consumption, a significant factor and a significant ongoing operational cost. It is our hope that by moving to our “Energy Saving Recommended” BroadLeaf Green PCs and PecoBOO™ power management software, businesses could save up to 93% of the energy consumption associated with desktop PCs.

Energystar Ethical Junction Member Made In Sheffield VM Ware System Builders

VeryPC Ltd is a registered producer under the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Regulations 2009. VeryPC's WEEE registration number is WEE/BE0198VR. Click here for more info about recycling your old IT equipment.