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English => News => Topic started by: Redaktion on May 27, 2021, 15:48:04

Title: Acer Aspire Vero is the result of the company's Earthion sustainability initiative; joins RE100 with a goal of going 100% green by 2035
Post by: Redaktion on May 27, 2021, 15:48:04
Acer has introduced the Aspire Vero, an Intel Tiger Lake-powered laptop built to conform to the company's Earthion sustainability principles. Acer said that the Aspire Vero and its packaging are made from paper and recyclable plastic. The company also announced that it is now part of the RE100 initiative with a target of using 100% renewable energy by 2035.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Acer-Aspire-Vero-is-the-result-of-the-company-s-Earthion-sustainability-initiative-joins-RE100-with-a-goal-of-going-100-green-by-2035.541353.0.html
Title: Re: Acer Aspire Vero is the result of the company's Earthion sustainability initiative; joins RE100
Post by: Wereweeb on May 28, 2021, 04:00:33
Really, you think the recycled paper and plastic are the relevant bits? That's just marketing. A chassis from aluminium is also "recyclable", you just scrape off the coating and melt it - and it can improve component livespan by a bit if used as heatsink. The real deal is the promised repairability and upgradeability - let's see if they have two SODIMM slots and modular components like a USB daughter board, charger port daughter board, and if components like keyboard and batteries are both easily replaceable and actually available.
Title: Re: Acer Aspire Vero is the result of the company's Earthion sustainability initiative; joins RE100
Post by: gc on May 29, 2021, 19:47:09
Manufacturing with recyclable materials makes closing the material cycle possible, but does not close the loop. It just passes the responsibility to someone else.  Today much recyclable waste is not recycled.  For example, the US and other countries once shipped most of their recyclables to China or other countries, but China and other countries have stopped accepting bales of recyclable materials, they have more than they are using. 

Manufacturing products using recycled materials does close the loop, at least for a cycle.

Aluminum may be a better recyclable material, because it can be recycled many times, while, with current processes, many plastics can only be recycled a few times before the quality degrades too much.  Aluminum is also very energy-expensive to produce (aluminum.org says 5% of US energy!?), so it pays to recycle it.   

Which laptops are being manufactured from recycled aluminum?