Apple is creating its own renewable power to offset the M4 Mac mini's carbon emissions - but is it enough?
Will this initiative work?
Apple’s M4 Mac mini has already garnered plenty of attention thanks to its brand-new and innovative design. Still, there’s another reason why it deserves your praise according to the tech giant.
The M4 Mac mini is now the second Apple product and the first Mac device to receive the “carbon neutral” label. In order to reduce the carbon footprint of the Mac mini, Apple invested in enough renewable energy to offset the emissions created by consumer use of the product.
This all started in 2023 with the Apple Watch Series 9’s production, in which it decided to eliminate emissions by purchasing renewable energy sources. While the energy needed to power a smartwatch is relatively small compared to the footprint of the device’s components, a Mac mini requires far more energy to function, which makes the latter a much more sustainable option for this method of carbon reduction.
While its reduced size likely reduced its carbon footprint, Apple tends to be tight-lipped about the specifics regarding materials and production for its environmental initiatives, which makes it hard to determine to extend of this.
Will this initiative really work?
While this does sound nice, and it really does, these renewable energy source purchases beg an important question — does any of this matter in the end?
Of course, any bit of reduction helps, and establishing a carbon-neutral footprint is certainly commendable. However, how carbon-neutral are these footprints when looking at the ecological impact of the semiconductor industry? Not only is it incredibly energy intensive but it also uses chemicals that pose a significantly higher global warming risk than carbon dioxide.
According to TechCrunch, manufacturing the base model for the Mac mini “generates 32 kg of carbon pollution” even after subtracting from Apple’s carbon-reduction investments, and the top-spec model “nearly quadruples the carbon footprint to 121 kg.”
It goes to show you how much — even with all these initiatives tech companies have been investing in for years — carbon emissions, chemical waste production, and overall contribution to ecological damage (not to mention the unethical labor practices that go into resource mining) are embedded in the tech industry.
The only real way to truly reduce carbon emissions is to reduce the production of tech products in the first place, while developing more sustainable materials and manufacturing practices. Otherwise, all the renewable energy sources in the world won’t offset the permanent damage being dealt to the planet.
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Named by the CTA as a CES 2023 Media Trailblazer, Allisa is a Computing Staff Writer who covers breaking news and rumors in the computing industry, as well as reviews, hands-on previews, featured articles, and the latest deals and trends. In her spare time you can find her chatting it up on her two podcasts, Megaten Marathon and Combo Chain, as well as playing any JRPGs she can get her hands on.