Fuji Xerox stays clean with Sustainability Report

Fuji Xerox turns another green page with the release of its fifth Sustainability Report.

According to Nick Kugenthiran, (pictured) new managing director of Fuji Xerox Australia achieved its eighth consecutive year of revenue growth, generating $780million in revenue, a 4.1 per cent increase on 2007/08.

“We believe that sustainability is an outcome of running our organisation in a responsible way based on key economic, environmental, and social criteria,” he said.

“Our vision is to achieve sustainable outcomes for all stakeholders, and this philosophy underpins not only our entire organisation, but also how we engage with our customers, suppliers, partners and the wider industry. Our sustainability report is an honest and transparent reflection of what we have and haven’t achieved and more importantly, how we’re going to go about meeting future goals.”

The report, accessible from www.fujixerox.com.au/sustainability, marks the fifth consecutive year that Fuji Xerox Australia has disclosed its economic, social and environmental performance adhering to the Global Reporting Initiative guidelines. This is also the fourth report to be independently assured by Banarra Sustainability Assurance and Advice in accordance with the AA1000 Assurance Standard (AA1000AS 2008).

It discloses the company’s performance against its stated objectives and outlines future goals in seven key areas, namely financials, corporate governance, customer experience, employee engagement, environmental impact of business operations, industry sustainability initiatives, and delivering responsible and environmentally friendly products and solutions.

“We’re pleased to report our eighth consecutive year of revenue growth, and will continue striving to improve our business performance in a responsible way to deliver greater value to stakeholders,” Kugenthiran said. “To achieve this, we recognise our industry must continue to evolve to enable more efficient printing and paper use, and help customers improve document-intensive business processes.”