Saturday, November 22nd 2008

ASUS Receives World's First EU Flower Eco Certification for Computers

ASUS, a company that is as committed to environmental conservation as it is to innovation and quality, yesterday saw its sustainable computing efforts rewarded with the conferring of the world's first EU Flower Eco Award for computers on its N50, N80, N20, and N10 notebooks. This achievement validates the eco-friendliness of ASUS' N Series notebooks, which had already been honored with prestigious EPEAT (Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool) Gold awards in October this year. On a broader note, it is also a reflection of the growing momentum of ASUS' sustainability drive-Green ASUS-which it initiated in 2000.

"ASUS aims to create a better world for everyone through top-notch, eco-friendly 3C products. With Green ASUS, we hope to blend technology, innovation and environmental sustainability for a cleaner, greener earth for all to live," said Jonney Shih, Chairman of ASUSTeK Computer Inc.

The EU Flower award ceremony was held in Prague on November 20th, 2008.

ASUS Notebooks: The World's First EU Flower Certified Computers
With the awarding of EU Flower certification to the N50, N80, N20, and N10 notebooks, ASUS notebooks have secured a spot in history as the world's first computers to be conferred the prestigious award. Underscoring the magnitude of this achievement is the fact that 15,000,000 computers are sold in Europe each year, and ASUS N Series notebooks are the first to obtain EU Flower certification. The EU Flower award utilizes one of the highest rated and strictest standards for green computing worldwide, and was developed under the Eco Label Scheme in 1992 by the European Union. The EU Flower is recognized in the EU and non-EU European countries such as Norway, Switzerland, Iceland and Liechtenstein. The Eco Label scheme was laid down under the new Regulation EC1980/2000 in 2000, and has expanded the product scope to all consumer products and the service sector, with a total of 23 product categories. The EU Eco-label is administered by the European Eco-labeling Board (EUEB).

Products are assessed according to the following criteria:

Energy-savings
Presence of hazardous substances
Product design
User instructions
Packaging
Labeling
Noise
Lifelong extension
Takeback

Green ASUS: Eco-friendly Notebooks from Conception to End-of-life
ASUS pursues the Green ASUS "Four Green Home Runs" in the design and production of each notebook, namely Green Design, Green Procurement, Green Manufacturing, and Green Service and Marketing. From the reduction and elimination of environmentally hazardous substances, to ensuring that the notebooks are easy to assemble, recycle and reuse, Green ASUS ensures disciplined adherence to environmentally-friendly principles at every step of a notebook's conception. The awarding of EU Flower certification to the ASUS N50, N80, N20, and N10 notebooks is a result of this uncompromising commitment to eco-friendliness. The success of Green ASUS is also evidenced in the fact that more than 50 ASUS notebooks are now qualified by Energy Star and that nine EPEAT Gold awards were conferred on ASUS notebooks in October 2008.
Source: ASUS
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7 Comments on ASUS Receives World's First EU Flower Eco Certification for Computers

#1
DaMulta
My stars went supernova


If anyone wanted to know what that logo looked like.
Posted on Reply
#2
KBD
lemonadesodaPlease tell me that logo is a joke. U cannot be serious! It's awful.
yea, the logo is very bland, i'm sure EU has artists to come up with a better one.
Posted on Reply
#3
lemonadesoda
Please tell me that logo is a joke. U cannot be serious! It's awful.

OMG it's true: ec.europa.eu/environment/ecolabel/whats_eco/index_en.htm

That is the official logo. Fire the design consultancy. It is embarrassing.

EVEN MORE embarrassing is their mission statement: ec.europa.eu/environment/ecolabel/pdf/eueb/missionstatement_140203.pdf

Not very well written. Not well formatted. AND look, 2003! That's EU bureaucracy for you. 5 years from launch to the "world's first" use of it. :shadedshu:eek::confused::banghead:
Posted on Reply
#4
ShogoXT
Got the N50 here. Its graphics performed better than expected, but its battery was worse than expected.

Oh well it was very cheap on newegg. :)
Posted on Reply
#5
1c3d0g
I have the Asus N10. It performs extremely well, except for the hard disk, which is painfully slow. Doesn't matter though, early next year I'll be swapping it with a speedy (but costly) Intel SSD... :cool:
Posted on Reply
#6
DrPepper
The Doctor is in the house
why does everything have to be environmentally friendly these days :shadedshu
Posted on Reply
#7
hacker111
Theres no such thing as an eco-freindly computer. They all use an energy source (electricity) which is mostly unrenewable. (is that a word?) :toast:
Posted on Reply
Apr 24th, 2024 12:15 EDT change timezone

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