Sinbon Electronics refocuses as a provider of green solutions, leveraging its electronics expertise and international footprint to support carbon reduction efforts across EV, renewable energy, and robotics sectors.
SINBON Electronics has repositioned itself as a wider supplier of “green solutions”, saying it will lean on its custom electronics expertise and growing international footprint to help customers cut carbon and improve resource efficiency across e‑mobili...
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The company said in a statement that the shift is an “evolution” of its existing business and quoted Lily Huang, its Chief Sustainability Officer: “By expanding our focus as a green solutions provider, we’re helping customers turn environmental responsibility into a competitive advantage.” The announcement highlights moves into electric vehicle charging, battery‑as‑a‑service models for light EVs and e‑bikes, humanoid robotics and supply‑chain connectivity for solar, wind and energy‑storage makers.
SINBON pointed to a series of concrete developments underpinning the strategy. It has deepened commercial ties with a German battery‑swapping start‑up to advance battery‑as‑a‑service for last‑mile delivery and has taken a minority stake in that partner to accelerate international deployment and manufacturing integration. The firm also recently entered the humanoid‑robotics market and says it will work with a precision engineering specialist to scale applications for automation and service robotics.
The company is expanding production capacity close to key markets. This year it more than doubled its US footprint with a 59,000‑square‑foot facility in Ohio, an investment the firm said will support industries from smart manufacturing to automotive and renewable energy while reducing transport‑related emissions through regional manufacturing. SINBON already operates a European facility and says the network brings production nearer customers in North America and Europe.
SINBON’s sustainability claims are accompanied by specific environmental metrics the firm has published. It reports a reduction in Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse‑gas emissions of about 28.8 per cent against 2021 levels and says renewable generation supplied 2,682,743 kWh of its electricity in the latest reporting year, with 3 MW of self‑owned solar capacity in place. Independent summaries of the company’s disclosures have rounded the emission reduction to 29 per cent and noted that renewables accounted for roughly 9.5 per cent of total electricity consumption. The company has also completed an initial biodiversity risk assessment framed around the emerging Taskforce on Nature‑related Financial Disclosures.
Industry observers say such corporate transitions are increasingly common as electronics manufacturers seek higher‑margin services and respond to customer demand for lower‑carbon supply chains. However, turning product‑level hardware and components into verifiable emissions reductions for end users remains operationally complex, depending on lifetime usage, servicing models and standards for accountancy across diverse geographies.
SINBON framed its internal actions as consistent with its customer offerings, emphasising energy‑efficiency design, carbon‑footprint evaluations of solutions and investments in onsite renewables and factory efficiency measures. The company did not publish separate third‑party verification of the latest reductions in the announcement, but its sustainability reporting and recent press materials note the measures taken to achieve the reported outcomes.
The firm said the strategy will be driven by continued investment in regional manufacturing, partnerships across the e‑mobility and robotics ecosystems, and the integration of sustainability criteria into product development and supply‑chain services.
Source: Noah Wire Services



