Meet Xu, Environment and Supply Chain Innovation Programme Manager in Shanghai, China
As a kid, I always wanted a bluer sky and cleaner water. I wanted to help make that happen.

What inspired you to do this kind of work?
I was raised in a coal-mining community, so I saw first-hand how industry, environment and community are related. And as I grew up, I learned how a community could come together to improve the world around them.
That was the spark?
Yes, seeing that determined people could create change. So, at university I majored in environment science and technology, and I’ve been at Apple for about five years now.
It’s different here: you’re encouraged to think beyond a rigid job description to influence change — you feel more invested.
Many at Apple are doing environment-related work — what’s the focus of your particular team?
We drive environmental innovation within the supply chain. That really matters because we create many millions of products for people around the world, and those products are built in partnership with thousands of material suppliers, so it’s important that we consider our impact.
Do you do much of your work in a supplier’s facility?
A lot, yes. I work directly with our supply chain partners to create cleaner ways to work. My role is to help make sure that the materials and processes we use are safe.
People must find that reassuring, given these are devices that we’re using or holding or wearing.
For sure, but it’s bigger than what we experience as customers using the products. We want our suppliers to understand the environmental and safety standards in place for everyone in the product’s journey, including their own employees.
We think of who uses a product and also who builds it — and we apply the same high standard of safety, regardless.
Your past influenced your work. Do you think your work influences your future?
I think our work is making a real difference today and tomorrow for all of us, including my eight-year-old and ten-year-old. Their generation is learning about health and the environment much earlier and more deeply than previous generations did.
What do they think of what you do?
They’re surprisingly interested — they actually think their mum’s job is really cool. And I agree! At home I’m helping them learn about what matters, and at work I’m helping others do the same.