Microsoft Announces they will be Carbon Negative by 2030
Source: Microsoft
Location: Redmond-USA
Rights Free - Access All Including Archive
Story
Slate 1 (Intro slate):
On January 16, 2020, Microsoft announced its commitment to be carbon negative by 2030 and that it will remove all the carbon it has emitted either directly or via electricity consumption since it was founded in 1975 by 2050. Additionally, it will create a $1 billion climate innovation fund to accelerate the development of carbon reduction and removal technologies. As a part of this goal, Microsoft will reduce its emissions by more than half by 2030 , extending across its entire business and supply chain.
Microsoft also announced that it will:
Work with customers and partners to help them track and reduce their own carbon footprints
Use its voice to advocate for public policies that support a global, low-carbon economy
Shows:
Slate 2 (table of contents slate):
This video contains footage of:
Microsoft’s AI For Earth Video
Microsoft Sustainability Calculator
Microsoft Datacenters
Keynote Soundbites from Microsoft Executives
Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft
Brad Smith, President of Microsoft
Amy Hood, Chief Financial Officer of Microsoft
Slate 3:
AI For Earth Video
This announcement represents Microsoft’s expanded emphasis on and commitment to environmental sustainability.
It’s existing AI for Earth represents one piece of Microsoft’s overall sustainability efforts. The initiative encompasses a five-year, $50-million program that brings the full advantage of Microsoft technology to those working to solve global environmental challenges in the key focus areas of climate, agriculture, water and biodiversity conservation.
Slate 4:
Microsoft Sustainability Calculator
Microsoft is empowering its customers and partners with new product features to track and reduce carbon. One of these new product features is the now-available Microsoft Sustainability Calculator. This tool is a new Power BI dashboard that shows emissions performance from cloud and Azure services. This enables customers to understand the carbon impacts of their cloud workloads, discover the potential benefits from fully migrating to Azure, and assists them in reporting their carbon footprint for IT services in the often hard-to-track Scope 3 category of emissions.
In this video you will see a demonstration of how the Microsoft Sustainability Calculator works to track carbon emissions for Microsoft customers.
Slate 5:
Microsoft Datacenters
As part of Microsoft’s commitment to achieve net-zero carbon in its business operations, the company is shifting to 100 percent renewable energy in its datacenters by 2025.
Slate 6:
Soundbites from Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft
Slate 7:
Soundbites from Brad Smith, President of Microsoft
Slate 8:
Soundbites from Amy Hood, Chief Financial Officer of Microsoft
ENDS
B-roll and other materials including images will also be made available on Red Robots MediaGRAB: https://mediagrab.press/presskit/Microsoft
THIS IS A VIDEO NEWS RELEASE - RED ROBOT LTD ACCEPT NO EDITORIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ENTIRE CONTENT OR INFORMATION RELATING TO THIS VIDEO NEWS B-ROLL, INCLUDING ALL CLAIMS, NAMES, DATES, SCRIPTS, ADVISORIES AND COPYRIGHTS.
THE END USER ACKNOWLEDGES THAT IN CONTINUING TO VIEW THIS CONTENT THE END USER ACCEPTS THAT RED ROBOT LTD EXPRESSLY EXCLUDES ALL LIABILITY FOR AND SHALL HAVE NO LIABILITY FOR THE CONTENT INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE FOLLOWING:
* EDITORIAL CONTENT
* ACCURACY OF REPORTING
* ANY BREACH OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
* TECHNICAL QUALITY
* ANY POST DISTRIBUTION MANIPULATION OF THE CONTENT
* ANY PRESENT OR FUTURE USE OF THE CONTENT FOR ANY PURPOSES NOT INTENDED BY THE DISTRIBUTOR