At its Glowtime Event this week, Apple included a slew of messaging about its sustainability goals, notably that the Apple Watch Series 10 can be 100% carbon-neutral by selecting the right bands. Both the watch’s aluminum and titanium watch cases are carbon neutral, but only the Sport Loop band ($49)<!–>, Braided Solo Loop ($99)–>, and the Milanese Loop ($99)<!–> receive the same rating.
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Last year’s Apple Watch 9 could also be carbon neutral by selecting the right bands, but the two watch lineups are still Apple’s only products to earn the 100% neutrality rating. Apple announced its commitment to a carbon-neutral supply chain and product lineup back in 2020. However, we saw a handful of references to this “2030” number in the mentions of each product during the Glowtime event to increase awareness of its sustainability efforts.
Okay, so what exactly does this mean for the watch? Apple claims to ship 50% of watches and their components by non-air methods, aiming to reduce fossil fuel emissions in the process.
The materials for the watch cases are made of entirely recycled aluminum or 95% recycled titanium, and the bands mentioned above consist of more than 40% recycled content. Apple says that 100% of the energy used to manufacture the watch bands is covered by clean energy sources.
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Additionally, Apple says it’s purchasing enough renewable energy credits to offset the energy cost required to manufacture the product. This is the approach typically employed by large companies that claim carbon neutrality: buying enough credits from forestry projects or conservation organizations to plant enough trees to “balance out” the ecological cost of its production and shipment.
However, critics maintain that simply buying its way out of the problem is ultimately not a sustainable solution, and overarching changes to production and pollution-generating production practices are needed.