Anritsu Corp 2005 SR

The report highlights Anritsu's transition to its first Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) report, covering the fiscal year 2004. Key achievements include reaching zero waste emissions at all manufacturing and development sites in Japan and significantly increasing the development of environmentally conscious products to 67% of new models. The company established a CSR Promotion Committee and the Anritsu Group Charter of Corporate Behavior to strengthen governance and ethics. Additionally, the report details progress in reducing CO2 emissions and managing chemical substances in alignment with global directives like RoHS and WEEE.

Company: Anritsu Corp

Sector: Information Information Technology

Country: Japan

Year: 2005

Type: SR

Pages: 23

Back to company

Anritsu Corp

Anritsu Corp 2005 Corporate Social Responsibility Report

Corporate Social Responsibility Report

The report highlights Anritsu's transition to its first Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) report, covering the fiscal year 2004. Key achievements include reaching zero waste emissions at all manufacturing and development sites in Japan and significantly increasing the development of environmentally conscious products to 67% of new models. The company established a CSR Promotion Committee and the Anritsu Group Charter of Corporate Behavior to strengthen governance and ethics. Additionally, the report details progress in reducing CO2 emissions and managing chemical substances in alignment with global directives like RoHS and WEEE.

Sign in for free to access detailed sustainability data, reporting standards, and ESG metrics.

Document Details

Report Year

2005

Reporting Period

Apr 1, 2004 - Mar 31, 2005

Fiscal Year

2004

Published

Jul 14, 2005

Type

Sustainability Report

Language

English

Pages

 

File Size

 

Standards & Assurance

Reporting Standards

Materiality Assessment

Assurance

Other Standards

ESG Data?Experimental — AI-extracted data, may contain inaccuracies

Energy Consumption

Water Consumption

Total Waste

Women in Management

Workplace Fatalities

Employees