Douglas J. Herrington | CEO of Worldwide Amazon Stores | Amazon website
Douglas J. Herrington | CEO of Worldwide Amazon Stores | Amazon website
Amazon has taken a significant role in addressing climate change by focusing on carbon credits as part of its sustainability strategy. The company is committed to reducing tropical forest loss, restoring degraded land, and advancing technologies to remove CO2 from the atmosphere. These efforts are quantified through carbon credits, which Amazon views as crucial for tracking contributions to combating climate change.
Amazon's approach includes supporting innovative initiatives that generate high-quality carbon credits. For instance, in 2021, Amazon co-founded the LEAF Coalition, a public-private initiative mobilizing over $1 billion to protect tropical forests and support local communities and Indigenous populations living alongside them. Additionally, through projects like the Agroforestry and Restoration Accelerator, Amazon aids small-scale farmers in storing more carbon while developing new income sources.
The company also invests in emerging technologies such as Direct Air Capture (DAC), which chemically filters CO2 from the air. This investment aligns with Amazon's broader goal of reaching net-zero carbon by 2040 under The Climate Pledge signed in 2019.
High-quality carbon credits are seen as vital because they connect financial investment with climate action beyond a company's operations. One credit represents one metric ton of CO2 reduced or removed from the atmosphere. These credits help unlock private sector climate finance at scale and ensure measurable and lasting climate benefits when held to high standards.
Despite challenges in the voluntary carbon market regarding transparency and quality, Amazon aims to address these issues by working with third-party experts to monitor projects' validity and integrity. They use rigorous methodologies rather than defaulting to current standards.
To evaluate carbon credits' quality, Amazon considers factors such as additionality—ensuring reductions wouldn't occur without climate finance—and estimation accuracy—biasing toward underestimation while improving accuracy over time with new science and technology developments. Social benefits are also crucial; nature-based projects must benefit local communities and ecosystems.
Technology plays a critical role in Amazon's strategy for long-term planning against climate change. Through programs like the Climate Pledge Fund, Amazon invests in emerging technologies like DAC systems developed by companies such as CarbonCapture Inc., highlighting their commitment to innovation at scale.