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HP Printer Made From Recycled Materials

May 23, 2008

HP unveiled a broad effort to help make it easy for customers to reduce the environmental impact of their imaging and printing.

Targeting customers spanning individual consumers to large businesses, the wide-ranging initiative includes elements such as:

Many of the announcements today are part of the new HP Eco Solutions program, which helps customers identify HP initiatives, products and services designed with the environment in mind.

“HP is focused on helping all of our customers – from consumers to enterprises – reduce their environmental impact,” said Vyomesh Joshi, executive vice president, Imaging and Printing Group, HP. “Over the past nine months we’ve helped several Fortune 500 customers realize up to a 30 percent reduction in their carbon footprint related to imaging and printing by using a variety of HP tools and services.”

Furthering its commitment to environmental responsibility in the area of imaging and printing, HP also pledged to:

HP Eco Solutions program

HP Eco Solutions is a company-wide program created to help customers easily identify environmental initiatives, products and services designed with the environment in mind. Elements of the program include:

HP paper policy

HP’s global paper policy is an important part of the company’s effort to help itself and its customers lower their environmental impact through energy and resource savings, digital alternatives, and reuse and recycling programs. HP is pledging to reduce the environmental impact of the papers the company buys, uses and sells by establishing one of the most comprehensive paper policies in the industry. HP’s paper policy incorporates six guiding principles that apply worldwide to HP branded paper, as well as paper used for HP’s internal operations, external marketing collateral and product packaging.

HP’s policy sets guidelines for the entire lifecycle of paper. The company will ensure that raw material inputs are used efficiently, give preference to suppliers who source fiber from credibly certified, sustainable forests and minimize carbon production and waste in the manufacturing process, and enable the responsible use and recycling of paper. HP plans to report on the company’s progress in implementing the policy and reducing the environmental impact of its paper usage.

Related to this policy, HP is pledging that 100 percent of its consumer photo paper will be derived from suppliers certified under a forestry certification program(4) by the end of 2009. HP is the world’s No. 1 selling brand of inkjet photo papers(5) and, with this pledge, becomes the first company to ensure that it makes sustainable sourcing and production choices throughout its entire paper supply chain.

Environmentally responsible clear packaging design

HP has engineered a way to package its high-end printers that, on average, cuts the volume of packaging materials needed to ship these products in half. The new clear packaging design eliminates the need for an outer corrugated box and extensive foam packaging, instead using minimal foam and supports along with a durable transparent film to encase the product for shipping. The outer transparent plastic film is made from the same recyclable materials as plastic milk jugs, and customers will have less packaging to manage when they receive their products.

HP is the first in the technology industry to apply this method to printing products. Beginning this summer, the company plans to use the new packaging design for shipping large printers with copier-like functionality that are on a stand or wheels. HP first applied the concept on existing multi-function printers and will use it to ship recently introduced products such as the HP LaserJet M5035x MFP.

Digital printing alternatives

HP has a long history of bringing to market digital printing alternatives that reduce a customer’s environmental footprint.

Earlier this year, the company showcased digital solutions for the retail photo printing market that consume three times less energy than comparable silver halide products and reduce the chemical and water waste associated with traditional photo processing.

Additionally, HP advanced the trend of print-on-demand publishing with the introduction of several new digital presses and workflow solutions over the past year. According to Pira International, up to 30 percent of traditional book stock remains unsold and is eventually re-pulped(6); with digital print-on-demand book publishing, excess inventory is significantly reduced.

The company also recently introduced HP Latex Printing technology, which offers print service providers a compelling alternative to traditional large-format printing methods by using water-based inks instead of solvent-ink technology which can be harmful to the environment.

More information about these announcements and HP’s social and environmental history is available at www.hp.com/go/ecosolutions.

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