Home Industry Technology Microsoft targets zero-waste operations by 2030 Microsoft aims to eliminate single-use plastics from its packaging by 2025 by David Ndichu August 5, 2020 Microsoft announced on Tuesday it plans to achieve zero waste from its operations by 2030. To achieve this goal, the company plans to recycle the servers that run its datacentres, eliminate single-use plastics from packaging and make recyclable Surface devices. As cloud services grow worldwide, datacentres must expand. Today, servers have an average lifespan of five years. Their disposal contributes significantly to the world’s growing e-waste problem. To reduce this waste, Microsoft plans to repurpose and recycle the servers through new Microsoft Circular Centres it is going to build worldwide. The first of those facilities will be located in Microsoft’s new major datacentre campuses or regions, and eventually added to existing ones. Approximately 300 million metric tonnes of plastic are produced every year, 50 per cent of which is used one-time. Half of this plastic waste comes from packaging. To deal with the issue, Microsoft aims to eliminate single-use plastics from its packaging by 2025. This includes plastic film, primary product packaging and the company’s IT asset packaging in its datacentres. And the company plans to invest $30m to fund the innovations for supply chain digitisation, e-waste collection, food waste reduction, and recycling industry products. Read: Planning for the data centres of tomorrow in the Middle East This announcement is the latest initiative by Microsoft to reduce its carbon footprint. In January this year, Microsoft announced plans to remove all of the carbon dioxide it has ever released into the atmosphere by 2050. It committed $1bn over the next four years to fund innovation in reducing, capturing, and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Tags Cloud datacentres microsoft sustainablity Zero-waste 0 Comments You might also like OpenAI in talks to raise new funding at $100bn valuation Oracle targets training 50,000 Saudis in AI, latest tech Microsoft, OpenAI tie-up comes under antitrust scrutiny Exclusive: Jonathan Allen on how AWS is supporting MENA’s cloud journey