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About

Konica Minolta promotes information disclosure and communication with stakeholders, based on the concepts of transparency and continuity. We disclose information about the environmental activities of the entire Group, through the issuance of reports such as this online version of the Environmental Report, other media, such as an environmental website, and various other measures.

We publish annual reports introducing the activities of the Group as a whole, as well as of individual sites. In fiscal year 2006, we began to post an online version of our Environmental Report, to explain the measures being adopted across the entire Group towards reducing environmental impact, and to convey our respect for the environment. We also publish Site Reports that detail environmental information about our business sites in Japan.
Konica Minolta has been active in acquiring Type I environmental labels as proof that our products are having less environmental impact. Concerning Germany's Blue Angel certification, the world's first Type I environmental label, each time its criteria are revised to become more stringent, Konica Minolta has acquired certification ahead of any other manufacturer in the category of digital multifunctional peripherals (MFPs), one of our primary product categories. In the category of office printing devices (office output devices), newly established in January 2007, the bizhub 420 was awarded Blue Angel certification, a global first. By the end of March 2007, we obtained certification for a total of 15 models.
In regard to the Eco-Mark, Japan's leading Type I environmental label, we are striving to obtain certification in principle for our office information technology equipment.
Under the EcoLeaf system, a Type III environmental label stipulated in Japan, we quantitatively identify and disclose the environmental impact of designated products throughout their lifecycle, ranging from procurement of raw materials to assembly, sales, use, disposal and recycling. Konica Minolta has also acquired “system certification,” affirming that we have a mechanism for appropriately and efficiently identifying such environmental impact data for our copying and printing businesses.
We have also registered the following categories of products with the Green Purchasing Network of Japan: copiers/MFPs printers/fax machines, copy paper, and digital printing presses. Environmental information on these products is published regularly.




In December 2006, we participated in Japan's largest environmental exhibition, Eco Products 2006, held at the Tokyo Big Sight trade show center. At this event, Konica Minolta presented its broad line-up of environmentally sound products, ranging from MFPs, printers, and other office devices, to on-demand printing devices, textile printers, and other equipment for industrial use. We also introduced haiku works (short poems) submitted by applicants for the Konica Minolta Eco Haiku Award, which annually invites public participation, and showed the environmental awareness-raising program One Planet, The Earth using Konica Minolta's digital planetarium, Media Globe.
In the Kansai region, Konica Minolta has set up a permanent booth at Osaka ATC Green Eco Plaza in Osaka Nanko to introduce, in an easy-to-understand manner, our activities in copier recycling.
To establish a sustainable society, it is important to develop environmental interest and understanding among the general public. Konica Minolta not only provides environmental education for its employees, but also cooperates in promoting environmental education for general citizens, in order to heighten environmental awareness of each and every person.

As one way to communicate environmental risks in the context of the Japanese PRTR (Pollutant Release and Transfer Register) system, each year since fiscal year 2002, we have held Community Environmental Briefings. In fiscal year 2006, we organized the Briefing at our Tokyo Site, Itami Site, and Mizuho Site (where the Briefing was held jointly by our three sites in the Tokai Region). To maintain our high level of corporate transparency, we continue to promote the disclosure of information so as to maintain the trust and sense of security of local communities. We also readily accept plant observation requests from the local community, schools, the local government and companies both within and outside Japan.