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Texas Instruments

Sustainability Report and Carbon Intensity Rankings

Is Texas Instruments doing their part?

Their DitchCarbon score is 44

Texas Instruments has a DitchCarbon Score of 44 out of 100, indicating moderate performance in sustainability efforts. This score reflects the company’s current carbon intensity, suggesting there is significant room for improvement in reducing emissions. A higher score would denote a lower carbon intensity and better environmental sustainability practices.

This was calculated based on 30+ company specific emissions data points, the higher the score, the better. Check out our methodology.

Industry emissions intensity

Very low

Low

Medium

High

Very high

Texas Instruments is part of the industrial manufacturing sector, which has a low carbon intensity ranking compared to other industries. Some industries are more damaging than others, this ranking gives you an indication of how carbon intensive the industry is which this company operates in.

Location emissions intensity

Very low

Low

Medium

High

Very high

Texas Instruments, located in the United States, benefits from a low carbon intensity rating in its region. This suggests that the company’s sustainability efforts are supported by the country’s overall lower environmental impact from energy production.

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– Historical Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions

– Coverage of all industries, product level data

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Unlock 30+ emissions data points on Texas Instruments

Get the emissions intelligence you need, no surveys required.

– Historical Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions

– Coverage of all industries, product level data

– Emissions forecasting, assurances

2.71%

...this company is doing 2.71% better in emissions than the industry average.

Texas Instruments, founded in 1930 and headquartered in Dallas, operates within the US industrial manufacturing sector. As a leading figure in the semiconductor industry, the company specializes in the design and production of analog and digital semiconductor ICs, including digital signal processing and microcontroller units. Texas Instruments also provides semiconductor solutions for various applications and has a dedicated branch for Education Technology.

emission intelligence's platform recommendations for Texas Instruments

Texas Instruments could reduce its emissions by 15% by investing in cleaner and more efficient machinery and equipment to enhance its Scope 1 emissions profile.

Good news, Texas Instruments has embraced SBTi commitments

Texas Instruments has pledged to set science-based targets through the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in line with climate science. This commitment means the company will develop and implement strategies to significantly cut its carbon footprint across its operations and value chain.
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Our methodology

Read about our emission calculation methodologies, and what the DitchCarbon Score means.

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