CONFLICT MINERALS
Altinex is committed to sourcing components and materials from companies that share our values around human rights, ethics and environmental responsibility.
In July 2010, President Barack Obama signed into law the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, also known as the Dodd-Frank Act. Among other things, this law directed the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) to enact rules obligating certain publicly traded manufacturing companies to annually report whether the products they manufacture or contract to manufacture contain “Conflict Minerals” that are necessary to the functionality or production of those products. The SEC published its Conflict Minerals rule in August 2012.
Under this rule, Conflict Minerals are tin, tungsten, tantalum and gold that are mined either in the Democratic Republic of Congo (“DRC”) or one of nine African nations that share a border with the DRC (the “DRC Region”). The goal of the SEC rule is to help end civil conflict and human rights abuses in the DRC Region committed by armed militant groups by denying revenue to those groups that derive their funding from control of mines in the DRC Region that produce Conflict Minerals.
Altinex strives to comply with the requirements of the SEC’s Conflict Minerals rule and expects our suppliers to do the same. However, Altinex does not directly purchase raw metal ores that may be used in the manufacture of our products from smelters or mines. Rather, we are several supply chain layers removed from the mining and processing of these metals, and as a result, we do not have first-hand knowledge of their source.
Accordingly, Altinex, like many other manufacturers, has decided to use the Electronic Industry Citizenship Coalition – Global e-Sustainability Initiative (“EICC – GeSI”) Reporting Template to ask our suppliers about the presence of Conflict Minerals in their products and, as applicable, the origin of any such Conflict Minerals.
Altinex expects that its suppliers will, in turn and as necessary, perform the same due diligence by asking their suppliers about the presence, source, and origin of any Conflict Minerals in the products of their sub-suppliers, and that this information will be shared with Altinex.
The process of tracing Conflict Minerals through a global supply chain is complicated and time-consuming, and some component suppliers or sub-suppliers may lack the resources to trace minerals all the way back to their source. Altinex will endeavor in good faith to have its suppliers exercise reasonable due diligence to evaluate their respective supply chains for the information called for by the Conflict Minerals rule.
We will continue to evaluate our policies to ensure compliance with the SEC’s Conflict Minerals Rule and make adjustments when necessary.