Written by: Katie Arcieri and Stephanie Tsao | S&P Global
A rendering of the new Climate Pledge Arena. Amazon, which secured the naming rights to the new home of Seattle's NHL team and WNBA's Seattle Storm, has branded the facility as Climate Pledge Arena. The name refers to The Climate Pledge, launched in 2019 by Amazon and calls on signatories to be net zero carbon across their businesses by 2040. Source: Amazon.com
Amazon.com Inc.'s sustainability report released this summer revealed a sharp year-over-year increase in global greenhouse gas emissions even as the company commits to shrink its carbon footprint.
Environmental experts and climate-focused investor groups credit the e-commerce giant for its transparency but say the trend was in the wrong direction and needs to be addressed.
In June, Amazon self-published its carbon footprint, saying its business operations emitted the equivalent of 51.17 million metric tons of carbon dioxide, a 15% jump from 44.4 million metric tons in 2018. The company did not explicitly state the cause of the increase, but acknowledged that it is in "high growth mode." The data includes Amazon's emissions from direct operations, purchased electricity and indirect sources such as third-party transportation, packaging, business travel and customer trips to physical stores of Whole Foods Market Inc., Amazon's grocery arm.
Experts say Amazon's move to release the data is significant because it provides investors with insight into the carbon footprint of a company that has been silent for years about its environmental impact.
"Amazon has showed it's woken up and it's listening and taking action in ways that investors have been asking for," said Lila Holzman, energy program manager for As You Sow, an advocacy group for shareholders of companies including Amazon. "We hope that continues."
That said, Holzman's group and others remain concerned about whether Amazon will achieve its 2019 Climate Pledge commitment to become carbon neutral by 2040 and meet the goals of the 2016 Paris Agreement on climate change a decade early.
This is one of four stories that review how transparent U.S. companies are being about their operational environmental and climate change-related risks through the lens of Trucost's weighted disclosure ratios for 2018, the most recent year available. The other stories examine how key companies in the energy, media and technology and food industries stack up against their peers.
Energy companies provide more robust climate disclosures than other sectors
Facebook, Apple ramp up environmental reporting amid calls for more transparency
Beyond Meat trails animal meat peers on reporting environmental effects
An Amazon spokesperson said in an email to S&P Global Market Intelligence that the company will continue to measure and report its total impact on the climate in the coming years, map the largest activities contributing to the impact, and use that data to develop carbon reduction goals, including its Climate Pledge.
Through the Climate Pledge, Amazon is investing in a range of large-scale solutions to decarbonize its business, but the company spokesperson noted it will take "several years for the carbon reduction benefits of these investments to be fully reflected in our carbon footprint."
Some observers are skeptical that Amazon can meet its Climate Pledge goals given its increase in carbon emissions.
"They are really putting themselves out there to do this," Andrea Ranger, shareholder advocate with Boston-based Green Century Capital Management, said in an interview. "I think the takeaway is that it's very important that they have made this commitment, and that they are standing behind it."
Outperforming peers
Although its emissions have increased, Amazon is outperforming its peers when it comes to environmental disclosures, according to Trucost data for 2018, the most recent year available. Trucost is a part of S&P Global Market Intelligence that measures how transparent U.S. companies are being about their operational environmental and climate change-related risks through the lens of weighted disclosure ratios. For details on Trucost's disclosure ratio methodology, see the informational box below.
Trucost gave Amazon a weighted environmental disclosure ratio of 72% for 2018, which is based on "Scope 1" data related to the company's direct operations such as the fuel burned by Amazon’s delivery trucks.
Amazon declined to comment on that ratio but the company outperformed its peers including Chinese e-commerce companies JD.com Inc. and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., as well as multiplatform retailer Qurate Retail Inc., all of which received disclosure ratios of 0 from Trucost for 2018. Booking Holdings Inc. received a disclosure score of 8% that year. JD, Qurate Retail, and Booking did not respond to inquiries seeking comment.
Alibaba declined to comment but in its 2018 ESG report the company said it is focused on several environmental efforts, including making its data centers more environmentally friendly by switching to cooling and water-efficient systems and working to replace packaging materials on Alibaba-related platforms with eco-friendly or biodegradable alternatives.
While Amazon is certainly making strides, the online retailer "is still relatively early in its journey" with regard to disclosing environmental information, said Trucost Head of Data Strategy and Operations James Salo.
That said, Salo does expect Amazon to provide more disclosures of its carbon footprint in the coming years. "For companies of that scale, it's more surprising when they don't disclose," he said.
A look 'under the hood'
Amazon's growing carbon footprint coincides with the company's increasing scope of energy-consuming businesses.
In addition to its online operations, Amazon is one of the world's largest logistics companies, relying on a vast network of fulfillment facilities to provide speedy delivery services, while its cloud computing unit, Amazon Web Services Inc., operates data centers worldwide. Amazon also runs more than 500 Whole Foods stores in North America and the United Kingdom. Construction is also well underway for Amazon's 4 million-square-foot second headquarters in Arlington, Va.
Despite Amazon's increased transparency, stakeholders still have questions about how the company will meet its long-term climate goals and whether the company will provide more detailed information about its carbon footprint.
The Principles for Responsible Investment believes that steps Amazon has taken thus far are helpful, but feels the company "could go deeper, for example, in terms of greater transparency in their reporting on emissions," said CEO Fiona Reynolds. PRI is an international network of investors collectively managing about $90 trillion in assets who have agreed to apply six sustainability principles to their investment decisions.
Holzman, of As You Sow, wants to see Amazon report more details about its "Scope 3" emissions from its supply chain, including activities related to its third-party sellers. Scope 3 emissions include activities that take place beyond a company's direct operations, like the production of Amazon packaging and devices, while Scope 2 emissions focus on purchased electricity.
"We want to make sure that communities around the warehouses where Amazon is located are not disproportionately affected by its operations," Holzman added.
And Ranger of Green Century Capital Management said her group wants to know more about the concrete steps Amazon is taking with initiatives like its "Shipment Zero" goal to eventually achieve net zero carbon emissions tied to shipping goods to consumers.
"Amazon will do well to have people look under the hood as clearly and as transparently as possible," Ranger said.