gec update to iti elcq2 –assess need for full revision (as per new policy) common criteria q1...
TRANSCRIPT
GEC Update to ITI ELC
October 2017
Today’s Discussion
GEC Overview to ITI October 20172
1. Review of EPEAT 2017 activities and preview of 2018
activities
2. Update on GEC 2017 activities and preview of 2018
activities
3. Overview of GEC Purchasers Guide for Addressing
Labor and Human Rights Impacts in IT Procurements
EPEAT Program
GEC Overview to ITI October 20173
2017 2018
Program Improvements• Consistency in the assurance
system• Efficiency in the assurance
system• Increased transparency
Product Categories• Mobile
Expand EPEAT Purchaser Base• US State & Local• Healthcare sector
Program Improvements• Standards Development Process• Assurance Model• CAB Ecosystem• Update EPEAT Registry
Product Categories• Network Equipment
Expand EPEAT Purchaser Base• EU Public & Private sector• Financial sector
EPEAT Program Improvements: PXX Policy
• PXX is a new policy meant to address how EPEAT label criteria are developed
• EPEAT label criteria have and continue to be developed through balanced voluntary consensus standards
• PXX addresses identified EPEAT program challenges:
– EPEAT standards freely available for purchasers (addressed through GEC having IP ownership)
– Standards/criteria updated to meet purchaser expectations and reflect technology innovations (addressed through continuous maintenance process)
– EPEAT label covers technologies of interest to purchasers (addressed through timely standards development, assessment and revision process)
4 GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
Key elements of draft PXX policy
• Standards developed through a balanced voluntary consensus process, as defined by US OMB A-119 (revised 2016)
Openness; Balance; Due process; Appeals; Consensus
• GEC requirements for SDO relationship– GEC will own IP for standards
– SDOs must have continuous maintenance process
• GEC role in standards development process– GEC will provide process support, including background research
– GEC will remain impartial in standard setting process
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Product
Category2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
Computers/
Displays
Q3 – Open Registry to Public (IEEE) Q1 – Assess need for full revision
(as per new policy)
Q3—if revision needed, launch
under new process
Imaging
Equipment
Q1 – Assess need for full revision
(as per new policy)
Q3--if revision needed, launch
under new process
Earliest potential
publication of
revised standard
Televisions Q1 – Assess need for full revision
(as per new policy)
Q3--if revision needed, launch
under new process
Earliest potential
publication of
revised standard
Mobile
Phones
Q3 – Open
Registry to
Public (UL)
Continuous maintenance under UL Continuous
maintenance under
UL
Q1 – Assess need
for full revision
(as per new
policy)
Earliest potential publication of
revised standard
Servers Q2 – Open Registry to Public (NSF) Continuous
maintenance under
NSF
Continuous
maintenance under
NSF
Q1 – Assess need for full revision
(as per new policy)
Network
Equipment
Q1 – Initiate SDO process Q4 – Open Registry
to Public (~6
months after
publication)
Q2 – Assess need for full revision
(as per new policy)
Common
Criteria
Q1 – initiate SDO process Q4 – Application in
EPEAT (~6 months
after publication)
EPEAT Product Category launch and revision timeline
6 GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
7 GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
EPEAT Advisory Council Follow-up Calls
Calls occur 9am Pacific and will be recorded and available online
• March 21
• June 19
• Sept 19
• Nov 20
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EPEAT Category Update: Servers
• Server standard published
• Sept-Oct.: GEC approval process
– Public feedback now
Tentative timeline for implementation
• January 2018: Training for CABs
o CABs and Manufacturers can start Desk Review/assurance
process as soon as January 2018
• March 2018: Registry opens to manufacturers
• June 2018: Registry opens to the public
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New EPEAT Category: Network Equipment
• Beyond the initial EPEAT Technology Roadmap– Changing technology landscape
– New purchasing trends (hardware versus “service”)
• GEC’s Process for Evaluating New Products/Services– GEC completes business case
– Business case criteria include: purchaser demand, product/service sustainability gains, product availability
• Network Equipment as EPEAT Product Category– Business case completed
– Completing SDO agreement (assume completion by Nov. 2017)
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
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Extending EPEAT Purchaser Base
What are Cooperative Agreements & Group Purchasing Organizations?
Cooperative Agreements (COOP) – A purchasing vehicle that aggregates public demand from more than one jurisdiction or entity. Pricing terms and requirements are typically shared amongst participating entities.
Group Purchasing Organizations (GPO) – Entity that leverages purchasing power of a group of businesses often in healthcare, manufacturing, agricultural industries, etc.
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
11
US States Cooperative Purchasing
NASPO ValuePoint:
➢Cooperative Purchasing arm for the 50 states and territories
➢$12B portfolio
NVP Portfolios: Q3 Engagement
➢ Computers $2.3B
➢ Copiers $135M
➢Wireless Communication ~$6B
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
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Healthcare GPOsPremier, Vizient, and HealthTrust are three dominant GPOs, representing upwards of 90% of GPO market.
Premier: • 3,750 Hospitals• ~$48B in spendQ3-4 Activities/2018:• Member Pilot with Mindclick• Green e-purchasing platform
HealthTrust• 1,400 Hospitals• ~$28B in spendQ3-4/2018 Activities:
• Presenting to HealthTrust Membership committee Nov.
Vizient: • 5,200 Hospitals• ~$60B in spendQ3-4/2018 Activities:
• Monthly meetings
GreenHealthXChange • Practice Green Health• Spend UnknownQ3-4 Activities/2018:• IT focused Portfolio to-be-developed
in 2018
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
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GEC 2017 Projects UpdateProject Update
Purchasers Guide to Labor & Human Rights Impacts in IT Procurements
• First round of interviews complete• Group review: ITI, EICC, BSR (all in October)• Finalize and “launch” at Geneva UN Forum on Business and Human
Rights (November)
State of Sustainable IT Procurement Report
• Last two weeks of interviews • Launch at BSR conference (October)
India Projects 1. Book Chapter: Draft completed; publication end of year2. End-of-Life capacity building criteria: engaged in interviews; results
featured at CRB conference in India (November)
Sustainability Through Cloud Computing
• Agreement with ASU Master’s Program in Business Analytics (Spring semester, 2018); part of BSR Future of the Internet initiative
EPEAT and GRI Guidance
• GRI guidance complete, quote from Chief Executive• Webinar planned
EPEAT and CDP Guidance
• Expected completion end of OctoberGEC Overview to ITI October 2017
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GEC 2018 Projects PreviewProject Update
Purchasers Guide to Labor & Human Rights Impacts in IT Procurements
• Pilot the Guide with two Public and Private purchasers
State of Sustainable IT Procurement Report
• Launch second edition Fall 2018
India Projects • Support Fellowship at Center for Responsible Business (CRB) focused on end-of-life management of IT products
Sustainability Through Cloud Computing
• Agreement with ASU Master’s Program in Business Analytics (Spring semester, 2018)
• Finalize purchaser guidance by Summer 2018
Purchaser Guide: SDGs and IT Sector
• Develop guide that educates purchasers on SDGs, highlights those most relevant based on IT brands commitment and reporting ability
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
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Questions or Comments?
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
Nancy Gillis, GEC CEO
Melanie Bower, EPEAT Program Director
GEC Purchasers Guide for Addressing Labor and Human
Rights Impacts in IT ProcurementsOctober 2, 2017
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Guide Overview
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
• Developed for Institutional Purchasers
• Addresses institutional purchasers’ “expectations” of how IT
product suppliers can/are/should address labor and human
rights impacts in their supply chain
• Based on Regulatory Landscape Analysis, Interviews
(individual & group) with Purchasers/Brands, and Human
Rights experts review
• Working collaboratively with EICC and Electronics Watch
• Focus is to provide:
– Questions for use by purchasers in procurement process
– Baseline performance expectation
– Best practice performance expectation
– Examples of verification documentation
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1. Communicating labor and human rights
expectations throughout the supply chain
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
Question Baseline Verification
Does your company have a written supplier code of conduct or policy in place that addresses, at a minimum these eight issues: child labor; forced labor; working hours, wages; discrimination; health and safety; freedom of association and collective bargaining and disciplinary practices /humane treatment of workers?
Publicly available Supplier Policy or Supplier Code of Conduct that addresses these eight issues.
The Code of Conduct or Policy requires compliance with local or national regulations (whichever is stricter to provide better protection for workers).
Suppliers that the company has a direct contractual relationship with are required to adhere to the Code or policy.
Suppliers are made aware of the Code of Conduct or Policy
Copy of the company supplier code of conduct, supplier principles or industry code of conduct. Companies that are EICC members or Joint Audit Cooperation (JAC) members meet this baseline expectation.
Companies that require their suppliers to have SA8000 certification meet this baseline expectation.
Companies who reference the International Labor Organization (ILO) Core Conventions should also have additional policies addressing wages, working hours and health & safety since these issues are not covered in the ILO Core Conventions.
Copy of contract, supplier terms and conditions or other legally binding agreement detailing requirements for suppliers to adhere to
supplier/industry code of conduct or policy.
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Additional Questions 2 - 5
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
2. Has your organization developed a process to identify
labor and human rights risks in your supply chain?
3. How is your company assessing your suppliers’
performance against your code of conduct or policy on
labor and human rights impacts?
4. How is your company using the outcomes of the
supplier risk screening and assessment process to
ensure suppliers are implementing corrective actions in a
timely manner?
5. How is your company engaging with suppliers to
ensure continuous improvement in supplier performance
against your Code of Conduct or Supplier Policy?
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Additional Questions 6 - 10
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
6. How is your company engaging with suppliers to build their
capacity for addressing human and labor rights impacts?
7. What steps is your company taking to publicly communicate
and/or report your progress on addressing labor and human
rights within your supply chain?
8. How are you collaborating with external organizations –
NGOs, research, advocacy, governments - to address labor
and human rights impacts in your or IT sector supply chains?
9. How does labor and human rights performance of suppliers
integrate into the direct spend sourcing decisions of your
organization?
10. What steps are you taking to address labor and human
rights impacts during the extraction phase of production?
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Questions or Input?
GEC Overview to ITI October 2017
Nancy Gillis, GEC CEO
Melanie Bower, EPEAT Program Director