Apple has released its 2013 Supplier Responsibility Progress Report,
and it features a number of updates from last year, including Apple’s
decision to join the Fair Labor Association (a notable first), and
conduct audits of its suppliers in tandem with that outside watchdog
organization. The results seem to be a tightening of Apple’s code of
conduct for suppliers all around, in terms of monitoring, penalties and
programs to improve conditions.
Apple conducted 72 percent more audits in 2012 than it did in 2011,
for example, totaling 393 audits across facilities employing 1.5 million
workers. All types of audits increased for the year, including
firs-time, repeat, process safety assessments and specialized
environmental audits, but the last one took the biggest jumps vs.
previous years. In 2012, Apple conducted 55 focused environmental
audits, which is a 293 percent increase over the number it ran in 2011.
The Mac maker works with outside associations in this area, too, just as
it does with the FLA regarding labor, including the Natural Defense
Council, the EPA and the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs.
The supplier audits also actually resulted in more severe punitive
action than usual. Apple has faced criticism in the past for doling out
corrective measures that seem rather toothless – most often putting
suppliers “on probation,” meaning they’ll be watched more closely for
future violations. But one supplier fell afoul of Apple’s measures to
protect against underage labor, with 74 cases counted at
a single facility. Apple terminated the relationship with that offending
party entirely, proving that there are real consequences for companies
that ignore its code of conduct and local labor laws.
Apple also came down harder on companies for compliance with working
hour regulations, and changed its policies and practices in monitoring
them to be more effective. In 2012, Apple started doing real-time work
hour tracking on a weekly basis for over 1 million of the employees at
its supplier companies, and publishing data on its progress every month.
That led to a 92 percent compliance rate with its 60 hour maximum work
week, as laid out in the Apple Supplier Code of Conduct, and Apple says
overall work weeks averaged less than 50 hours.
Another
area of improvement for Apple was in participation in its training and
education programs. There were 1.32 million workers trained on local
laws, worker rights, health and safety and Apple’s own Code of Conduct
during 2012, a 97 percent increase over 2011′s 670,000. Apple also
provided more free educational opportunities to workers than ever
before, with 201,000 cumulative participants in those programs, up 235
percent from 60,000 in 2011.
Apple’s transparency definitely improved over the course of 2012 when
it comes to its efforts around supplier responsibility and maintaining
healthy and safe work environments, and that’s something Apple CEO Tim
Cook clearly undertook as a conscious effort. That’s not to say that
Apple didn’t have its fair share of labor issues during the year (issues
around the demanding requirements for building the iPhone 5 come to
mind), but especially in the way that Apple has allowed disinterested
third parties to come in and aid with its monitoring efforts, 2012 was
definitely the most significant year yet in terms of improvements made
to its stance on supplier responsibility.
Apple’s 2013 Supplier Responsibility Report Includes 72% Bump In Audits For 2012, 97% Increase In Training
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