Apple is not the greenest company in the world. In fact, although it made Fortune’s 2014 list of 50 Best Global Green Brands at No. 22 it ended up with a negative performance/perception gap: consumers believe that the company is greener than it actually is.
“In a world of social media,” says Interbrand CEO Jez Frampton, “this can be extremely dangerous.”
In the past 12 months, Apple has stepped up both its environmental initiatives and its public relations effort.
So far this year it has announced plans to develop 80 megawatts of solar power in China, bought a small hydro-electric dam in Oregon and purchased a 32,400 acre forest in Maine.
In a press release with a Beijing dateline, Apple has announced a multi-year project with the World Wildlife Fund to protect as much as 1 million acres of Chinese forests — part of an effort to reduce to zero its impact on the world’s supply of virgin (as opposed to recycled) fiber.
These initiatives — spearheaded by former EPA administrator Lisa Jackson and backed by CEO Tim Cook — speak to several constituencies.
To consumers: People like to buy products from companies that seem to share their values, especially when it comes to the environment.
“In the decade ahead,” wrote Fortune’s Brian Dumaine in the intro to last year’s Green Brand list, “those companies that invest in initiatives that help people and the planet as well as their bottom line and who can communicate those efforts effectively will have a competitive edge.”
To investors: Tim Cook famously brushed off a stockholder who demanded to know the return on investment of Apple’s green initiatives. This isn’t about “the bloody ROI,” Cook told him. That’s true; the iPhone provides Apple with all the ROI it needs.
The company hasn’t said how much those Chinese forests will cost, and it declined to tell how much virgin fiber it consumes. Suffice it to say that this is not a company known for going into things to lose money.
To China: Apple may be based in Cupertino, but China is where nearly all of its products are made and where more iPhones are sold than in any other. This was, in many ways, a message from Tim Cook to China’s leadership, part carrot and part stick. “We are excited to work with leaders in our supply chain who want to be on the cutting edge of China’s green transformation,” he said. The message ends with two fat paragraphs of facts:
Developers in China have earned more than $US3.4 billion through the worldwide sale of apps on the App Store, with over half of that amount paid in the last 12 months alone. App Store income earned by China’s developers is growing at a faster rate than any other major market in the world.
Got that, Beijing?