Compared to heady growth in recycling figures from 2004 to 2006, IBM's more recent performance on using recycled plastics has dropped slightly, with the percentage of locations meeting recycling goals dropping precipitously. However, the company's commitment to renewable energy continues to inch upwards.
Just 41 percent of IBM locations met their annual recycling goals in 2008, down from 52 percent in 2007 and 63 percent in 2006, according to IBM's 2008 Corporate Responsibility Report (PDF), which includes information from 2008, as well as snippets from the first half of 2009. In the future, IBM notes that it will release its annual CSR reports in the second quarter of the year.
The company used recycled plastic for 10.3 percent of its 2008 plastics purchases. That figure is down from 10.6 percent in 2007 and 11.7 percent in 2006.
Here are some more highlights from the report.
IBM paints itself as addressing what it calls a "series of wake-up calls" in the first decade of the 21st century. Those include climate change and resulting food shortages, growth in energy demand and the realization that the world will face severe water shortages.
The company points to its Corporate Services Corps as its version of a "corporate Peace Corps." The corps travels the world looking for ways to solve environmental and societal problems with improved technology. To date, 68 nations have benefited from its work.
When it comes to global contributions and the environment, however, IBM's commitment is tiny compared to its emphasis on improved education. In 2008, IBM gave $2.2 million toward the environment, compared to $128 million toward education.
When judged by the Greenpeace Cool IT Challenge, IBM and Sun Microsystems were the top ranking companies, with scores of 29 out of 100.
Here is a look at IBM's ratio of waste going to landfills versus reuse or recycle.
Here is a look at IBM's energy conservation and renewable energy figures.