Home Business Technology Climate crisis changing parental decisions on purchasing, careers, family size – HP study reveals

Climate crisis changing parental decisions on purchasing, careers, family size – HP study reveals

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HP announced on Tuesday new global research conducted by Morning Consult revealing the serious actions many parents are taking due to climate change, from everyday decisions to long-term family planning.

The study among parents in India, Mexico, Singapore, United Kingdom and United States found that 91 per cent of parents are concerned about the climate crisis, leading to changes that are reshaping their lives and purchasing habits. More than half (53 per cent) say it has impacted their perspective on having more children. Forty-three percent of respondents said they had reconsidered working for a company based on its commitment to environmental and social issues.   

The research also found many parents favor companies that are taking action to address climate change. Nearly two-thirds (64%) of parents prefer products that are sustainably sourced and 60 per cent say sustainable company practices play a large part in their purchasing habits. That is despite the findings that the vast majority of parents (84 per cent) acknowledge the cost of living is rising and more than half (57 per cent) believe engaging in environmentally friendly practices takes up a lot of time.  

Global Head of Social Impact, Michele Malejki: “Families, like all our customers, rely on HP to connect them to the things that matter most, be it work, entertainment or loved ones. It’s one of the reasons parents are top of mind for us. And like every generation before them, today’s parents have their own unique pressures, especially the climate crisis. It’s why we’re going beyond our business impact to make our business better for people and the planet”.  

While parents are taking personal action, most also believe key players in the corporate world must act, too. Most parents (51 per cent) believe that companies have “a lot” of responsibility in holding themselves accountable on climate action, as opposed to customers (36 per cent).  

“Our research correlates to what we see in our business: we are keeping customers, winning new sales, and attracting talent because of our Sustainable Impact initiatives and sustainable products. If we are serious about changing the trajectory of the climate crisis, industry must go beyond, changing the mindset of ‘do no harm’ to ‘do more good”, Chief Sustainability Officer, James McCall said.

The findings come as HP releases its annual Sustainable Impact report for the twenty-second year. The report details the company’s progress toward comprehensive and bold environmental and social goals. HP has:  

  • Reduced its absolute carbon footprint by 18 per cent since 2019. This brings the company closer to its goal to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2040 – end to end.
  • Reduced single-use plastic packaging by 55 per cent compared to 2018.  
  • Counteracted deforestation for 32 per cent of all paper used in HP products and services toward goal of 100 per cent.  
  • Accelerated digital equity for more than 21 million people on path to 150 million by 2030.  
  • Committed to building a pipeline of diverse talent, with 46 per cent of United States new hires last year from racial or ethnic minorities.  HP aspires to be the most sustainable and just technology company.

In 2021, HP set aggressive Sustainable Impact goals in three areas where the company believes it can make the most difference – Climate Action, Human Rights and Digital Equity. The 2022 report details progress toward all three focus areas including a net zero carbon value chain, giving back more to forests than we take, creating a more circular economy, building a culture of equality and empowerment, and accelerating digital equity around the world to enable traditionally excluded communities to thrive in a digital economy. 

HP commissioned global research firm Morning Consult to conduct independent research on this topic. It was conducted between 18th and 26th May 2023 among a sample of 5,007 adults in the United States, United Kingdom, India, Mexico and Singapore. Results from the full survey have a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.

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