Climate Neutral Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/climate-neutral/ Live Bravely Thu, 17 Apr 2025 17:11:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Climate Neutral Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/climate-neutral/ 32 32 5 Meaningful Ways to Celebrate Earth Day /outdoor-adventure/environment/celebrate-earth-day/ Wed, 19 Apr 2023 14:06:28 +0000 /?p=2624484 5 Meaningful Ways to Celebrate Earth Day

国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 sustainability chief has five green actions you can do to make a difference

The post 5 Meaningful Ways to Celebrate Earth Day appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
5 Meaningful Ways to Celebrate Earth Day

The interwebs are rife with : plant a tree, walk to work, pick up trash, recycle. While all of these activities are great (and the latter two we should all be doing every day), I offer you five of the very best ways to celebrate. These are actions that might just ripple through the other 364 days of your year and become habits. They are things you can do鈥攁nd then talk about with your family and community, so that they feel inspired to pick up the baton, and do them, too.

Earth Day is not just a day. It鈥檚 a movement and a call to action to do our part and change our culture to fight for the health of our precious planet before things really go south.

So put down your phones, log out of Facebook and Instagram, and do one or more (or all!) of these five meaningful things听on Earth Day. Because your daily actions do matter and they鈥檙e just the beginning.

The author hugging tree on Earth Day
The author, hugging a birch in Stowe, Vermont (Photo: Mirna Valerio)

Get 国产吃瓜黑料鈥攐n Earth Day and Every Day

Breathe the air. Listen to the noises. Hug a tree. Move your body. The very best action you can do for the planet on Earth Day is to just love being on it. Appreciate it. Commit to it. And don鈥檛 hoard it for yourself! Invite a non-outdoorsy friend along on your outing and talk about how getting outside nourishes you on the regular.

Eat Plants

No need to commit to a life of veganism (but more power to you if you can), but skip the meat today and incorporate听more plants into your diet. It will be better for you and way better for the planet. The UN estimates that .

Don鈥檛 Buy Anything

We all buy too much stuff鈥攕hiny new products we want but don鈥檛 really need. These things emit carbon into the atmosphere through their raw materials, production, transport, all to end up in a landfill when we tire of them. Resist the urge to splurge this Earth Day. The de-influencing TikTok trend is largely focused on the health and beauty industry, but it applies to everything, and it鈥檚 beautiful. Ask yourself, do I really need this new hoodie, kitchen gadget, or daypack, or table lamp? Or is there still life left in my old one? If you must buy something, visit a secondhand store and go on a treasure hunt.

Donate Some Old Gear

Join the circular economy. That jacket you haven鈥檛 worn in three years? Those boots that never fit right? That pack you hang on to because it reminds you of your AT thru-hike? Make like Marie Kondo: Thank them for their service and let them go to someone else who can use them. We鈥檒l even help!

We created our program to keep good outdoor gear in circulation and help one of our favorite nonprofits, . Just box up your stuff, , and send it off to our consignment partner, . They鈥檒l make minor repairs, resell it, and we鈥檒l donate 100 percent of the proceeds to The Oath, who teaches people to take action for planet, inclusion, and adventure.

Skip the Shower

The average American shower lasts for eight minutes and uses 16 gallons of water. The EPA estimates that the U.S. uses more than one trillion gallons of water per year staying clean and fresh. For most of us, turning on the tap is as mindless as scratching an itch. But our great-grandchildren could very likely not have the same experience if we don鈥檛 start being more mindful of the water we use every day. Do you really need to shower every day? Do you mindlessly let the tap run while you brush your teeth or turn it off between rinses? If you did, you鈥檇 save about three and a half gallons of water with every brush.

Happy Earth Day from all of us at 国产吃瓜黑料!

Doing right by the planet can make you happier, healthier, and鈥攜es鈥攚ealthier. 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 head of sustainability, Kristin Hostetter, explores small lifestyle tweaks that can make a big impact. Write to her at climateneutral-ish@outsideinc.com.

The post 5 Meaningful Ways to Celebrate Earth Day appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Here鈥檚 How Jeremy Jones Takes Climate Action Every Single Day /outdoor-adventure/environment/heres-how-jeremy-jones-takes-climate-action-every-single-day/ Wed, 12 Apr 2023 12:55:28 +0000 /?p=2625069 Here鈥檚 How Jeremy Jones Takes Climate Action Every Single Day

In his daily conversations, diet, business practices, and play time, Jeremy Jones is always working for the planet.

The post Here鈥檚 How Jeremy Jones Takes Climate Action Every Single Day appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Here鈥檚 How Jeremy Jones Takes Climate Action Every Single Day

Pro snowboarder Jeremy Jones thinks about climate change 100 times a day鈥攖hat鈥檚 no exaggeration.听As founder of , a nonprofit that focuses on legislative climate action, and , maker of boards, gear, and apparel, it鈥檚 his job. Jones also happens to be my cousin, and we鈥檝e talked about environmentalism and sustainability our entire adult lives. But how does he translate those thoughts into actual, tangible, everyday deeds? I recently spoke to Jones about how he takes听action for climate 365 days a year.

Constant Communication

Everyday actions and practices matter, but conversations, especially with people who might be in a different political camp as you, are key. A lot of people feel like they don鈥檛 belong to the climate movement because they recognize they contribute to the problem鈥搈aybe they fly a lot, raise cattle, or just love burgers, work for an oil or plastics company, or still buy bottled water by the case. This feeling of being on the outside听is a huge problem. I don鈥檛 care what you do, we need you to join the climate movement. We need people from all sectors, political parties, regions, and backgrounds working together on this one unifying thing: the planet we all live on. Because climate change impacts all of us.

When I talk to people about climate change, I try to find common ground. Your political leanings don’t matter: if you love skiing, snowboarding, snowmobiling, hunting, or fishing, this affects you. If you love to go mountain biking, RVing, waterskiing, or camping with your kids, it affects you, too. Everyone needs to be welcome in this movement. Whether you drive a monster truck or a Tesla, we want you to be part of the conversation and the solution.

鈥淢ake your voice heard,鈥 says Jones, who regularly lobbies in Washington, reaches out to lawmakers, and participates in climate rallies. (Photo: Ming Poon)

A Greener Business

We launched Jones Snowboards in 2010, and from the start we identified a three point North star: performance, durability, and sustainability. Being part of 1% For The Planet is key because we need more people that wake up every day working on climate action and our donation helps with that.

Three years ago we took a big step by moving away from toxic traditional epoxy resins (to hold the board components together). We finally found a bio-based resin (made from tree sap) that works every bit as good as the old stuff. It took a lot of trial and error.

Next winter we鈥檒l take another big step, with a project that鈥檚 been six years in the making: turning old snowboards into new products, and keeping them out of the landfill. We developed a machine that pops the metal edges and inserts off old boards (for recycling). Then we stack boards on top of each other, press them together, and cut them into strips to create these really strong structural pieces we鈥檒l use (instead of carbon fiber) to support power spots in new boards.

Plant-Based Diet

I hate dietary titles, but I鈥檝e been embracing a vegan diet for over 10 years. I used to love a good burger, but I鈥檝e lost the taste for it and this is the best lifestyle lever I can pull for the climate. The cattle industry accounts for 14.5 percent of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions [according to the UN]. As a country, we eat way too much red meat. My plant-based diet has also made me a better athlete. I feel better at 48 than I did at 28. Years ago, I thought my snowboard career was waning, but when I switched to a plant-based diet, I felt way more spry and way less achy. I noticed less inflammation in my muscles and joints.

Voting With Dollars

Change takes longer than you think it will, but once it starts, it happens faster than you thought it could. Here鈥檚 an example, going back to the food idea: I was coming back from a snowboarding trip recently. It was late and we were driving through Bakersfield, California, (north of L.A) and we were starving. We found a random burger shack that was open and as we pulled in, I thought, 鈥榳hat am I gonna eat here.鈥 Turns out that place had awesome plant-based burgers and shakes. Even Burger King and MacDonald鈥檚 have plant-based options on the menus now. You would never have seen that a few years back. But people demanded it, and are voting for plant-based food with their dollars. And it鈥檚 changing. The same applies to the outdoor industry. Consumers are rewarding companies for making cleaner products and using their power to get us on a better path.

Reducing Emissions

We only have so much CO2 to burn and I think about my carbon emissions every day. I switched to an EV a couple years ago. I carpool to the mountain and the trailhead and ride my bike around town rather than drive. I recycle and avoid plastic. I鈥檝e updated my house with solar panels, a heat pump, better insulation, more efficient appliances, all of which gave me huge energy savings. And I only get on a plane when I really have to. I take fewer, longer, slower trips now. The majority of my adventuring takes place here in the Sierra, my back yard, and I鈥檝e cut my air travel by about 90 percent over the last 15 years.. It stung a bit at first losing my frequent flier benefits, but I鈥檓 over it and now I鈥檓 happy sitting in the back of the plane and traveling less. Pro tip for others who have recently lost airline status: Board last and ask if they can bump you up to a better seat or an empty row (poor man鈥檚 first class).

Doing right by the planet can make you happier, healthier, and鈥攜es鈥攚ealthier. 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Head of Sustainability, Kristin Hostetter, explores small lifestyle tweaks that can make a big impact. Write to her at climateneutral-ish@outsideinc.com.

The post Here鈥檚 How Jeremy Jones Takes Climate Action Every Single Day appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Go Gentler on the Planet with These Grocery Store Swap-Outs /outdoor-adventure/environment/grocery-store-swap-outs/ Wed, 29 Mar 2023 13:38:44 +0000 /?p=2623677 Go Gentler on the Planet with These Grocery Store Swap-Outs

By swapping out bagged potatoes for loose ones, and eggs in cardboard cartons instead of plastic or styrofoam, you鈥檒l lighten your environmental footprint

The post Go Gentler on the Planet with These Grocery Store Swap-Outs appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Go Gentler on the Planet with These Grocery Store Swap-Outs

Confession: I love bougie听lettuce. You know, the stuff that comes in plastic clamshell packaging, costs about 20 cents per leaf, and always has the words 鈥渙rganic鈥 and 鈥渂aby鈥 on the label. I鈥檇 eat a pile with every meal if I could, dressed in a squeeze of lemon and a little olive oil.

But the packaging kills me. I feel pangs of guilt every time I toss one in my grocery cart, knowing that I鈥檓 supporting a company who uses plastic packaging and that plastic recycling rates in the U.S. are only around 6 percent.

lettuce in a grocery story display
Guilty pleasure: The convenience and taste of these pre-washed greens are hard to resist. (Photo: Kristin Hostetter)

Oftentimes, though, to make up for my fancy lettuce habit, I choose more humble, naked greens鈥搇ike the bland head of red leaf or green leaf lettuce or a head of cabbage dressed up with some chopped herbs or kale.

It got me thinking about all the choices I make in the grocery store and the packaging of every item I place on the check-out conveyor belt. As someone who鈥檚 trying to live more sustainably, should I buy my ancho chili powder in a plastic bottle or a glass one?

Like most things in the world, the devil is in the details. It was time to make some grocery store swap-outs.

鈥淟ess packaging is always better for the planet,鈥 says Cory Connors,听host of . 鈥淏y choosing products that are package-free or sustainably packaged, you鈥檙e voting with your wallet and telling companies that you won鈥檛 buy stuff that鈥檚 excessively or irresponsibly packaged.鈥

But it鈥檚 over-simplistic听to think that all packaging is evil. 鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing sustainable about rotten or damaged food,鈥 says Connors. 鈥淚f a company has to package something in a multilayered plastic container in order to get it to the consumer in an edible state, that鈥檚 more sustainable than not using packaging if it results in rotten, unusable food.鈥

鈥淲e can all be part of the solution when it comes to sustainable packaging,鈥 says Connors. 鈥淭he key, says Connors, is to only buy products that are packaged in material that you are certain that you can recycle in your community or, better yet, that you , like glass jars. Confirm with your local material recycling facility (also known as a MRF, which rhymes with surf) what is actually getting recycled. Then share what you know in your community.鈥

Connors is encouraged by systemic shifts he鈥檚 seeing, like more stores adopting and services to accommodate things like soft plastics and textiles.

In the average grocery store today, we鈥檙e faced with choices on literally every shelf, so Connors and I took a virtual stroll, aisle by aisle, to talk about the most sustainable choices we can make at the grocery store.

16 Easy Grocery Store Swap-Outs

Fresh and Refrigerated Stuff

1. In the produce department, skip the plastic produce bags. This is one of the simplest grocery store swap-outs you can make. Just wash those fruits and veggies.

2. Buy loose carrots, potatoes, and onions, rather than the pre-bagged options.

3. Choose cardboard egg cartons, not plastic or styrofoam. You can put them in the recycle bin or repurpose them as seed starters for the garden or DIY fire starters with melted candle scraps and sawdust or dryer lint. Egg cartons also make a great substitute for packing peanuts or you can tear them up and add them to the compost heap.

An easy grocery store swap-out: eggs in cardboard instead of plastic or styrofoam.
An easy choice: Not only is cardboard the better for the planet than plastic or styrofoam, it protects eggs better, too, as you’ll see in this (Photo: Kristin Hostetter)

4. If you鈥檙e stopping by the deli counter, bring听your own containers, and skip the plastic bags and cups. 鈥淚t takes guts to bring your own packaging into a typical store,鈥 says Connors. I can attest to this. Most deli workers raise their eyebrows when I ask them to put the sliced provolone in my silicone bag, but they do it. 鈥淭en years ago people, it was radical to bring your own reusable grocery bags to the store,鈥 says Connors. 鈥淏ut now it鈥檚 commonplace, thanks to bag bans and bag taxes. Maybe the same will be true for deli bags and containers in the future.鈥

Chicken and cheese at the deli inside reusable bags
It might feel weird to BYO containers to the deli or meat counter, but if we start doing it, some day it could become as commonplace as bringing your own reusable shopping bags. (Photos: Kristin Hostetter)

5. If you鈥檙e buying a cut of meat that is sold both at the butcher counter and in prepackaged portions, opt for the former. You can use the strategy listed above鈥攂ring your own re-usable containers. Note that if your purchase comes wrapped in butcher paper with a plastic coating, that won鈥檛 be recyclable. Be brave! If someone questions you, take the opportunity to tell them that you’re trying to avoid single-use plastic packaging.

6. Avoid black plastic (often found in the prepackaged meat department) trays at all costs. . Anywhere. Putting it in your bin is wishcycling.

Dry Goods

7. If your store has a bulk aisle, shop there for staples like rice, grains, nuts, and pasta. Bring your own containers!

8. 鈥淲hen we think about things like spices, sauces, and condiments, whatever container you will wash and reuse when it鈥檚 empty has the lower carbon footprint,鈥 says Connors. 鈥淚f you reuse glass bottles, for instance, that鈥檚 the best grocery store swap-out you can make. If you don’t plan on reusing the container, just be sure that whatever you buy is recyclable where you live.鈥

9. Kick the bottled water habit. Just do it. In the U.S., we鈥檙e fortunate to have perfectly drinkable tap water just about everywhere. Invest in a good water bottle and refill it often. Here’s my fave.

10. Wean yourself off plastic wrap. I was hooked for many years, but I kicked the habit when I realized that my roll of plastic is nice to have, but not a need. Now, when I really need to wrap something, I find another method. Beeswax wraps are okay (but they lose their stick after a while). I like reusable silicone bowl covers, which come in a variety of sizes. And sometimes I use tin foil, which is recyclable as long as it鈥檚 clean. Just collect it in a ball until you have one that鈥檚 about three inches in diameter so it will get sorted properly in the recycling center and not fall through the cracks of the machinery.

11. Say no to liquid or plastic pod-encased dishwasher soap. I love , which only cost me about 41 cents per load and work great. 听鈥淎ll liquid cleaners are 90 percent water,鈥 says Connors. 鈥淏uying water-based products for use in a room that produces water (like the kitchen, bathroom, or laundry room) is pretty silly. Especially because there are so many powdered and concentrated cleaners available today. And the carbon footprint of concentrates is so much lower, because it requires less packaging and is lighter and smaller to ship and transport.鈥 (Side note: I used to buy Cascade powder in the green cardboard box because of the non-plastic packaging. Then I learned about and made the switch to Blueland.)

12. Order pressed powder tablets, nontoxic powder, or soap nuts to avoid the pods (they鈥檙e wrapped in plastic that becomes microplastic when it dissolves) and the big plastic jugs. Don’t get greenwashed into ordering “eco strips” like I was. Just like the pods, they contain a dissolvable plastic that eventually makes its way into our water.

13. Skip the dryer sheets (which are made from single-use plastic in the form of polyester) and opt for . They last for more than 1,000 loads, so you鈥檒l save money, too.

14. Stop wasting money on zipperlock bags. Even if you wash and reuse them, eventually they give out. Not so with my new favorite bags by . I love these supple yet rugged听pouches, which come in a variety of sizes, are easy to clean, easy to seal (some silicone bags are stiff and fussy) and freezer safe.

Personal Care

15. Skip the plastic shampoo bottles and discover the wonder of . This is one of my favorite grocery store swap-outs because shampoo bars do a fantastic job and last forever as long as you don鈥檛 let them sit in a puddle of water. They鈥檙e great for travel, too, which means you can reject the little plastic bottles in your hotel room.

A grocery store swap-out: skip plastic shampoo bottles and opt for shampoo bars
Shampoo and conditioner bars are a fabulous alternative to plastic bottles. They cost about 12 bucks each, last for several months, and ship in sustainable packaging. (Photo: Kristin Hostetter)

16. And say goodbye to plastic conditioner bottles full of watered down product, too. After trying a slew of conditioner bars that leave my long hair feeling dry, waxy, and tangly, I finally found one by that kicks ass.

One last thing: If you鈥檙e frustrated by the excessive plastic packaging at your local grocery, write a letter and tell them so! I used from nonprofit , and about a week later received a phone call from the store manager. We had a meaningful discussion, and while he defended the need to package bulk-bought spinach in clamshell plastic packaging, he listened, and conceded that there are some items in the store that could do with less packaging, and promised to look into it.

Doing right by the planet can make you happier, healthier, and鈥攜es鈥攚ealthier. 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 Head of Sustainability, Kristin Hostetter, explores small lifestyle tweaks that can make a big impact. Write to her at听climateneutral-ish@outsideinc.com.

The post Go Gentler on the Planet with These Grocery Store Swap-Outs appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Manchin Signs on to Biden鈥檚 Climate Agenda. But There鈥檚 a Catch. /outdoor-adventure/environment/manchin-signs-on-to-bidens-climate-agenda/ Mon, 08 Aug 2022 16:00:18 +0000 /?p=2592176 Manchin Signs on to Biden鈥檚 Climate Agenda. But There鈥檚 a Catch.

The compromise offsets climate spending with big wins for oil and gas, too

The post Manchin Signs on to Biden鈥檚 Climate Agenda. But There鈥檚 a Catch. appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Manchin Signs on to Biden鈥檚 Climate Agenda. But There鈥檚 a Catch.

Update: August 8, 10 A.M.: On August 7, the Senate passed the Inflation Reduction Act. It now goes to the House for a final vote, where it is expected to pass.

On Thursday, Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV), reached an agreement with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) to support an array of spending priorities that the Biden Administration put forward. Dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act, it includes $369 billion in new money to address climate change鈥攖he largest investment in emissions reduction ever. But to get Manchin鈥檚 approval, the bill鈥檚 fine print links any development of renewable energy on federal land to an expansion of oil and gas drilling on those lands. Environmentalists are calling the requirement a 鈥減oison pill鈥 and say it defeats the administration鈥檚 climate goals.

The House of Representatives passed a bill last year called the Build Back Better Act that included $555 billion in climate investments. But in the evenly divided Senate, where Vice President Kamala Harris鈥 vote serves as a tiebreaker, and where the GOP remains united in its opposition to pretty much everything, every single Democrat senator needs to support a bill if it鈥檚 to stand any chance of passing.

Even then, bills are only able to pass the Senate through a political maneuver known as . Since that process can only be used infrequently, and only for spending measures, Democrats must stuff a variety of their priorities into large spending packages. In this case, the climate change money is included in the bill alongside a provision that will allow Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices, and one which extends funding for the Affordable Care Act through 2025.

Spending in the Inflation Reduction Act totals $433 billion over ten years. To pay for that, the bill proposes raising $739 billion by increasing the corporate minimum tax rate to 15 percent, reducing the prices Medicare pays for prescription drugs, eliminating the carried interest corporate tax loophole, and expanding the IRS鈥 ability to pursue corporate tax cheats. The $300 billion surplus will go to reducing the federal deficit, which Democrats claim will help reduce inflation.

Manchin, , has long opposed taking any action to address climate change. So the rest of the Democratic Party has been forced to negotiate with him in order to pass any sort of spending of that nature. Manchin鈥檚 demands brought that $555 billion climate budget down to $369 billion.

Here鈥檚 how that $369 billion will be spent.

Clean Energy and Electric Vehicles: There are a variety of tax cuts aimed at reducing the cost of green technologies in transportation and electricity generation, for both manufacturers and consumers. Those two sectors are responsible for 52 percent of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.

For example, some tax credits would incentivize power companies to use more solar, wind, and batteries听while producing, transmitting, and storing electricity for the public. Another would incentivize the public to install heat pumps and add solar panels to their homes.

The bill will expand the tax credit for purchasing an electric vehicle through 2032, offering people purchasing a new EV a $7,500 break, and those buying a used one $4,000.

There鈥檚 also money to make public housing energy efficient, and to help home owners purchase more efficient appliances.

Methane Emissions: Methane may not stay in the atmosphere as long as carbon does, but it generates 86 times as much heat during the 20 or so years in which it does. Plus, governments have not traditionally regulated methane emissions to the same degree as carbon, and methane is emitted during every stage of oil and gas production.

The bill will impose limits on methane leakage and impose hefty fines on violators, while creating a royalty fee for all methane extraction on public lands, including methane that鈥檚 vented or flared from oil and gas wells. There鈥檚 even budget for the Environmental Protection Agency听to monitor methane producers and enforce these regulations.

Environmental Justice: The bill provides $60 billion for environmental justice, including $15 billion to provide clean energy to low-income communities, $3 billion in grants for those communities to clean up mines, and improve their resilience to climate change, and $3 billion to reconnect communities divided by highway construction.

Clean Technology: There鈥檚 $60 billion earmarked for domestic manufacturing of zero emissions technology. That will provide incentives and financing for domestic production of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, and for extraction of the minerals necessary to create batteries.

Overall, Democrats estimate the bill will reduce carbon emissions 鈥溾 by 2030, when compared to 2005 levels. That amount is substantial, but still behind Biden鈥檚 target to reduce emissions by 50 percent this decade.

The problem is that Manchin鈥檚 negotiations are also going to increase oil and gas production during that time. So, it鈥檚 unlikely the bill will have the total impact Democrats claim.

Buried in sections 50264 and 50265 of are provisions that require any renewable energy projects on federal land be predicated on lease sales first being held for the oil and gas industry. .In order for rights-of-way to be granted to utility-scale renewable energy projects on public lands, the bill requires the Department of the Interior first offer two million acres of public land and 60 million acres of offshore waters to the oil and gas industry, each year, for the next decade.

鈥淭he legislation all but ensures that the fossil fuel industry will maintain current oil and gas production levels without any change for the next decade,鈥 says Brett Hartl, from the Center For Biological Diversity.

that, separately from this bill, Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also promised Manchin legislation that will ease permitting rules for new oil and gas pipelines, including one that runs through West Virginia.

鈥淧assing new laws to mandate oil and gas leasing would fundamentally conflict with the Biden administration鈥檚 climate goals,鈥 says Hartl.

The post Manchin Signs on to Biden鈥檚 Climate Agenda. But There鈥檚 a Catch. appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
29 Ways to Build a Happier Company /business-journal/brands/29-ways-to-build-a-happier-company/ Sat, 10 Apr 2021 02:50:36 +0000 /?p=2567998 29 Ways to Build a Happier Company

Want to turn your business into everyone鈥檚 dream workplace? Follow these cues for a more fulfilled, productive, and inspired workforce.

The post 29 Ways to Build a Happier Company appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
29 Ways to Build a Happier Company

There are jobs鈥攁nd then there are jobs. You know the ones: the gigs that make coming to work about so much more than punching the clock and collecting a paycheck.

The ones that fill the workday with camaraderie, a sense of purpose, and just plain fun. It shows in the policies and perks a company offers, in ways big (health insurance, parental leave) and small (ski days, free gear). And they pay off鈥攂ig time鈥攆or employers, who can count on loyal, productive employees who feel invested in the company鈥檚 success.

Here are just a few of the ways leaders in this industry go above and beyond for their workers. We hope employers and employees alike will consider this a menu of inspiration for greater workplace satisfaction. To say the past year has been a challenging one for businesses across the industry is an understatement. But despite all the hurdles, we still wouldn鈥檛 want to work anywhere else. This is why.

We asked industry members to nominate their workplaces for providing a superior employee experience. After combing through all 165 responses, these are our favorite ideas worthy of imitation.

Play 国产吃瓜黑料

CASE STUDY: Darby Communications, Asheville, NC

As any veteran of summer camp knows, getting out into the wilds together builds lasting bonds. So this boutique PR firm throws an annual staff campout, taking employees on a (paid) overnight excursion that has included paddling to an island campsite, fly-fishing lessons, tubing, and whitewater rafting over the past four years. 鈥淚t builds community on our team, so there鈥檚 a deeper connection between us,鈥 said Vice President Angie Robinson. The pandemic forced the team to cancel last year鈥檚 trip, but Darby replaced it with smaller outdoor gatherings, and when it鈥檚 safe, 鈥淲e鈥檙e planning on a blowout camping trip to bring back the tradition in a big way,鈥 said Suzanne Hermann, media relations director.

Pro tip: The financial barrier to this sort of retreat is low, points out Robinson. Camping is cheap, and Darby takes advantage of its clients鈥 gear and services (like whitewater guiding), so the total cost is only $200 to $300 per year for nine employees.

Bring Community to the Cafeteria

CASE STUDY: Skratch Labs, Boulder, CO

Every month, 29 full-time employees of nutrition/sports drink company Skratch Labs are invited to a communal breakfast at the office, courtesy of founder Allen Lim. Some staffers play sous chef, helping whip up Lim specialties like savory rice porridge, breakfast salad, and egg tacos. 鈥淚n the same way that a family is closer when they share meals around the table, we are a better team when we do the same,鈥 said CEO Ian MacGregor. Since last spring, the communal dining has shifted to live cooking lessons for employees at home. 鈥淲e prep and ship all necessary ingredients to each of our team members, then we all get on a massive video call and learn to make something,鈥 said MacGregor.

Pro tip: Even if you don鈥檛 have a full kitchen or a cookbook author for a founder, as Skratch Labs does, you can still break bread as a team: Think regular takeout gatherings or voluntary potlucks.

Skratch Labs cafeteria
Breakfast at Skratch Labs is always a fun and social experience. (Photo: Courtesy)

Embrace Inclusivity

Brands across the industry are beginning to meet the moment by ramping up DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) efforts.听

Hit the Slopes

In what other industry do you get formal permission to go skiing when the pow is fresh? Here are just a few of the businesses that allow鈥攏ay, encourage鈥攑laying hooky on a snow day: Backbone Media, BoldBrew, Burton, Hala Gear/CKS Online, Meteorite PR, and Stio.

Commit to Fighting Climate Change

CASE STUDY: BioLite, Brooklyn, NY, and Peak Design, San Francisco, CA

BioLite (maker of camp stoves and lights) and Peak Design (a camera gear and travel bag brand) took their sustainability missions to the next level in 2018 with the launch of their Climate Neutral nonprofit. The organization helps other brands measure their total carbon footprints鈥攆rom sourcing to manufacturing to shipping鈥攁nd then offset them with carbon credits, earning certification. In 2019, 146 companies joined the program, representing a sizable commitment to reducing carbon emissions. 鈥淐limate Neutral makes me so proud to be a part of the organization,鈥 said BioLite Ecommerce Operations Manager Joseph Caravaglia. Hyden Polikoff, treasurer at Peak Design, agreed: 鈥淚 want the place where I put my time and effort to embody my values.鈥

Get Creative when Challenged

CASE STUDY: Mustang Survival, Burnaby, BC

When the pandemic hit last March, industry members counterpunched. Mustang Survival was one of them, switching from making its usual dry bags, drysuits, and ocean racing gear to churning out hundreds of thousands of waterproof/breathable protective gowns for healthcare workers (many other brands swiftly did the same with masks and eye shields). Not only did the pivot provide crucial PPE to hospitals across Canada, but it also allowed Mustang to hire 50 new employees (31 of them were still with the brand as of press time). 鈥淲e set up a school and ran new hires through extensive training on sewing and taping,鈥 said Mark Anderson, VP of engineering. 鈥淭hey learned skills directly transferrable to the apparel we make.鈥

Be Generous with Vacation Time

CASE STUDY: Roads Rivers and Trails, Milford, OH

Every winter for the past six years, as long as she鈥檚 been working at specialty retailer Roads Rivers and Trails, Manager Olivia Eads (pictured below on Pikes Peak) has taken at least a month off work to go climbing. Owners Bryan Wolf, Joe White, and Emily White highly encourage it with unlimited (unpaid) vacation time for all staff. 鈥淲e get the shifts covered and we make it work,鈥 said Wolf. In 2019, employees averaged 40 days off apiece鈥斺渁nd that鈥檚 just outdoor trips, not Christmas,鈥 Wolf noted.

Welcome Fido

Embracing pups in the office鈥 when we go back to the office, that is鈥攑ays off for both dogs (more walks) and employees (research shows that the presence of a furry friend reduces stress and boosts self-esteem). A few businesses that make room for our best friends: Arc鈥檛eryx, Kelty, Nemo, Ruffwear, and Xero Shoes.

Spread Profits Around

Some workplaces give everyone a different kind of promotion. All employees at 国产吃瓜黑料 (OBJ’s parent company) get stock options, which increase with strong performance or a promotion. 鈥淚t鈥檚 critical for creating alignments [between employees and the company] and incentives,鈥 said CEO Robin Thurston. When the company does well and hard work pays off, employees benefit, too.

Encourage Exploration

CASE STUDY: Cotopaxi, Salt Lake City, UT

How鈥檚 this for an antidote to job turnover? After 18 months, employees of this B Corp apparel and gear brand can cash in on their first of two 鈥渂ucket list stipends鈥: $1,000 to use on a dream trip anywhere in the world. After five years, the reward bumps up to $5,000. Recent employee trips have included touring Morocco, cycling the French Alps, and a fish-spearing, coconut-gathering survival excursion on a remote Caribbean island. 鈥淣umber one, we need to be able to attract and retain talent, and this is a unique perk,鈥 said founder and CEO Davis Smith. 鈥淎nd secondly, we want to make sure our employees are living the values of the business. We鈥檙e building a brand around adventure and exploring the world.鈥 Cotopaxi has spent nearly $100,000 on its bucket list payouts so far, he says, but, 鈥淭hese things pay for themselves鈥攜ou don鈥檛 have to pay higher wages to convince someone to join the team, or [deal with] rehiring.鈥

Pro tip: Cotopaxi helps employees make the most of their trips by holding learning sessions on topics like getting involved in local communities and traveling on a shoestring budget. 鈥淲ithin the team, there鈥檚 a constant sharing of travel deals,鈥 said Smith. 鈥淚f you keep your eye on deals, $1,000 can cover a trip somewhere really fun.鈥

Get Gear in Our Hands

CASE STUDY: NRS, Moscow, ID

Paddling gear can be expensive, as NRS鈥檚 employees well know. But lack of capital won鈥檛 ever stand in the way when someone pulls a rafting permit, thanks to the brand鈥檚 鈥渃ompany use鈥 stash of rafts, frames, coolers, stand-up paddleboards, inflatable kayaks, and drysuits. Employees can check out the gear for free. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had employees go on Grand Canyon trips, and they were able to get everything they needed and disappear with it for 18 days,鈥 said Steve Farley, key account manager. In 2019, 130 employees dipped into the stash for a total of 880 checkouts.

Pro tip: Appoint someone (or a small team, as NRS does) to manage the gear sign-out process and keep items clean, safe, and organized.

Give Us Long Weekends

The Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics offers half-day Fridays, and in summer, Outdoor Prolink switches to a four-10s schedule. Nobody鈥檚 head is really in the game at 3 P.M. Friday anyway.

Van driving into the distance in Moab
Long weekends can go a long way toward boosting employee happiness. (Photo: Courtesy)

Support Employees鈥 Life Goals

CASE STUDY: Outdoor Gear Exchange, Burlington, VT

Employees who get five years under their belts at this retailer have extra reason to celebrate: They qualify for its Living the Dream program, which awards a $5,000 grant for pretty much anything that makes their lives a little easier. 鈥淥riginally, it was to go on a dream trip,鈥 said Brian Wade, executive director of retail and service. But the list of acceptable uses has ballooned over the years to include down payments on homes, childcare, a new vehicle, or paying off debt. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 think of anybody who hasn鈥檛 figured out a way to use it,鈥 he said.

Pro tip: How does OGE afford it? 鈥淲e just do it,鈥 said Wade, noting that the total expense is a fairly small line item on the budget. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to honor the people who鈥檝e put in time. And the emotional impact of getting a lump sum is really great.鈥

Support New Parents…

CASE STUDY: 国产吃瓜黑料 PR, San Francisco, CA

In a country where his seven-person PR firm doesn鈥檛 legally have to provide any break for its new parents, owner Gordon Wright instead offers the best parental leave policy we鈥檝e seen in the industry: six months of leave at 80 percent salary, moms and dads alike. 鈥淚t feels like the听right thing to do,鈥 Wright said. That kind of investment pays off in ways both tangible (an attractive carrot when looking for new talent) and intangible, says Senior Account Executive Kelsey McGraw. 鈥淕ordon and all the managers believe family comes first,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey care for my well-being, and I don鈥檛 want to disappoint them. I want to work that much harder to see this company be successful.鈥

Pro tip: Doing without a key employee for six months poses challenges, but Wright notes that hiring a freelance substitute can help any company keep chugging along.

…And Not-So-New Parents

CASE STUDY: Patagonia, Ventura, CA

Parents industry-wide could be forgiven for daydreaming about a job switch to Patagonia. For one, there are the on-site daycares (in Ventura and Reno), which together care for 200 kids and offer tuition discounts based on income. 鈥淏eing able to nurse my son at daycare rather than pump every three hours was so huge,鈥 said Amy Garrahan, southwest sales manager. And听if a primary parent needs to travel for work while a baby is still nursing? Patagonia covers travel expenses for a caregiver.听Pro tip: Half of the brand鈥檚 daycare program is covered through tuition; 75 percent of the rest is recouped via tax credits, improved productivity, and employee retention. Companies that can鈥檛 add their own programs can still help parents with daycare stipends and more flex time options.

Bond over Workouts

Good: allowing employees to head out for a midday sweat break. Better: organizing group runs, yoga classes, bike rides, and even surfing sessions (like Nemo does on the New England coast) during the workday for communal exercise, stress relief, and team bonding in one fell swoop.

Surfer riding a wave
The Nemo team regularly takes trips together鈥攍ike this one to Long Sands Beach, Maine. (Photo: Courtesy)

Make Fitness Easy

CASE STUDY: Wolverine Worldwide, Rockford, MI

Spin classes, pickleball, pickup volleyball, and basketball: All in a day鈥檚 work at Wolverine. Opened in 2019, the on-campus, 29,000-square-foot The Rock facility also offers an indoor track, group fitness classrooms, and cardio equipment. Plus, membership is free for all 600-plus employees of eight brands. 鈥淣ot only does it help in getting people excited to work for Wolverine, but having a variety of activities available is really key for blowing off steam,鈥 said Merrell Senior Marketing Manager Lauren King.

Pro tip: Building an entire gym might not be in the cards. 鈥淏ut figuring out things that might not cost a lot of money, but add a lot to culture, is.鈥 See #16 and #18 for ideas.

Give Cash for Ski Passes

Or gym memberships, yoga classes, and other wellness perks of choice, as sales agency Caraway & Co. does ($150 per employee per year).

Invest in Employee Healthcare

CASE STUDY: Waypoint Outdoor, Seattle, WA

Perks like gyms and company bike rides are great, but a real commitment to employee health should be built on a foundation of high-quality, affordable health insurance. This sales agency for brands like Klean Kanteen and Smartwool takes that to heart, covering 100 percent of premium costs for its employees. That鈥檚 made a huge difference for sales rep Carly Morava, a cancer survivor who鈥檚 been with the company for three years. She鈥檇 wanted to switch careers from retail to repping, but was afraid she wouldn鈥檛 be able to afford the insurance she needed. Unlike other workplaces she鈥檇 considered, Morava said, 鈥淲aypoint pays for everything, and it鈥檚 a really good plan.鈥

Help People Climb the Ladder

CASE STUDY: KEEN, Portland, OR

In a workplace just as on a mountain, sometimes the right guide can make all the difference. That鈥檚 why Keen added formal mentoring to its benefits. The Career Compass Program matches eager employees with seasoned volunteer 鈥渃oaches鈥 for structured career advice and development. Pairs meet twice a month to set goals and track progress. Though the program is open to everyone, says Global Communications Manager Mindy Montgomery, women make up the bulk of the participants鈥斺淩esearch shows that women utilize formal mentoring programs more because men have greater access to informal mentoring opportunities,鈥 she noted. Senior Compliance Specialist Elsa Clements credits the program with helping her land a promotion in 2019. 鈥淚t was super-valuable in giving me confidence,鈥 she said. She worked with her coach on strategies for putting her best foot forward, and 鈥淚t was really good for me to have that framework when I sat down with my manager.鈥

Pro tip: Career Compass facilitators consider applicants鈥 communication style and personality when setting up pairs. 鈥淚f the participant and coach have trouble communicating, they鈥檙e going to have a hard time forming a connection,鈥 said Montgomery, 鈥渨hich is a crucial component to a successful coaching relationship.鈥

Support Education

Help us advance by springing for certifications, courses, conferences, and skills clinics. Take Vail Resorts: Employees can apply for a $2,500 Educational Ascent Grant to fund a college degree (vocational to Ph.D.) or certificate (such as EMT).

Let Employees Drive Improvements

CASE STUDY: Hydro Flask, Bend, OR

Hydro Flask holds its own kind of holiday two or three times a year: the Better Future Day. Each one features a menu of activities for employees to choose from, all conceived and planned by fellow employees. Recent options have included guided meditations, art workshops, public speaking courses, and SUP sessions. 鈥淚t could be anything from, 鈥業t鈥檚 time to reorganize our shelves鈥 to 鈥楲et鈥檚 bring in an expert on a topic like racism and have a difficult discussion,鈥欌 said Lucas Alberg, senior manager, PR and brand communications. Continually working on company culture is a bedrock value for Hydro Flask, says Senior HR Generalist Ryan Combellick, 鈥渂ut if it鈥檚 something that鈥檚 just coming from the top down, it can feel forced.鈥

Pro tip: Don鈥檛 overthink the scheduling, and just do it. 鈥淭here鈥檚 never a good time for this, but it鈥檚 imperative that you make it happen,鈥 noted Alberg. 鈥淧roductivity may be lost that day, but it鈥檚 taking one step back and two steps forward for the company.鈥

Encourage Clubs

Supporting an employee resource group (ERG), a club dedicated to a particular identity or interest鈥攆rom working parents to sober employees to members of specific ethnicities or religions鈥攃ultivates belonging and community. VF Corp. has put significant resources into its ERGs since 2017.

Make the World a Better Place Far Away鈥

CASE STUDY: Superfeet, Ferndale, WA

When this insole brand decides to give back, it goes big. Superfeet donates 1 percent of its profits to charity, including an ongoing public-health service trip to Guatemala to build latrines and rainwater-capture tanks for small rainforest villages. 鈥淚 wanted our employees to be engaged with the charities we鈥檙e working with,鈥 said Director of Outreach and Fit Jeff Gray, who runs the program. 鈥淗ow can we get down on our hands and knees and get dirty and make a difference? It鈥檚 about writing the check, then also diving in.鈥 The brand has taken eight to ten employees on the (fully paid) trip for the past four years, an opportunity that has proven so popular that Gray has to pull names out of a size-17 running shoe to select participants. Superfeet鈥檚 commitment to nonprofits builds loyalty and helps attract employees, said Gray: 鈥淪o many are grateful to be able to work within this culture.鈥

Pro tip: Got the cash鈥攐r the time鈥攖o donate? Choose beneficiaries carefully, says Gray. He screened a number of nonprofits before choosing six to support based on how well their core values matched Superfeet鈥檚. 鈥淭hen you can build that relationship, bond, and do some great work together,鈥 he said.

…And Closer to Home

CASE STUDY: Big Agnes, Steamboat Springs, CO

For a company making gear tailored for use on the trail, volunteer trail maintenance felt like a natural way to live out brand values of land stewardship and community involvement.

So Big Agnes zeroed in on the Continental Divide Trail, which passes within two miles of company HQ, officially adopting the 72 miles from nearby Rabbit Ears Pass to the Wyoming border in 2018. Since then, the brand has organized several trail work days on their section every year. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a cool opportunity to see the owners of the company really caring about our public lands, and [having] the employees be part of that,鈥 said Product Developer Paige Baker. And though the point of the trail work is giving back, it doesn鈥檛 hurt brand image with customers, either, says co-owner Len Zanni, who notes that the marketing team produces blog posts and publishes catalog essays about the project.

Pro tip: Scale give-back projects according to your workplace鈥檚 size and goals. 鈥淭hink about what you care about, then figure out what organizations or areas could use your help, and how much help you can lend,鈥 said Zanni. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e a smaller organization, maybe you can put someone on a nonprofit board, or donate money or time.鈥

Remote Work Policies that Work for All

When the pandemic ends, many will still appreciate the flexibility to work remotely. Evans says the best policies let employees work wherever they鈥檙e most productive. Her company, The Ready, traded its office for monthly stipends for home office upgrades, co-working spaces, or rent for optional group offices.

Fair Profit Sharing

Sharing success fosters an environment of collaboration, not competition. Email marketing firm ConvertKit diverts a chunk of its profits to a shared pool that鈥檚 distributed to all through a formula that gives a little extra to those with the longest tenure.

Employee Connection

One easy way to help build connection among virtual workers: Start meetings with a five-minute check-in, prompted with questions like, 鈥淲hat was your weekend highlight?鈥

Self-Set Salaries

Want employees to really feel they鈥檙e being paid what they鈥檙e worth? Let them choose their own salaries, like tomato-packing brand Morning Star has done for decades鈥攁nd make all of them public.

The post 29 Ways to Build a Happier Company appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
REI Holds Vendors Accountable for Climate and DEI Practices with New Product Standards /business-journal/issues/rei-new-2020-product-standards/ Thu, 10 Dec 2020 06:37:46 +0000 /?p=2568635 REI Holds Vendors Accountable for Climate and DEI Practices with New Product Standards

REI has updated its Product Impact Standards, setting new climate and inclusion expectations for its 1,000+ vendors

The post REI Holds Vendors Accountable for Climate and DEI Practices with New Product Standards appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
REI Holds Vendors Accountable for Climate and DEI Practices with New Product Standards

For the first time since their introduction in 2018, REI’s groundbreaking Product Impact Standards鈥攁 series of requirements companies must meet if they wish to stay on the retailer’s shelves鈥攈ave received an update.

Initially conceived听to support ethical production practices and sustainability, the standards have now expanded to cover diversity, equity, and inclusion, raising the bar further for brands currently selling their products at any of REI’s 160+ locations across the country.

鈥淩ather than looking at sustainability only, we’ve re-conceived the standards to include diversity and inclusion,” REI vice president of product Chris Speyer told OBJ today. “This follows a natural timeline. We launched the first standards in 2018, and 2020 was our deadline for our vendors to meet them. Once we completed that step, it was a perfect time to rethink our goals.鈥

New 2020 REI Product Impact Standards

Though some new climate and sustainability requirements have been added to the 2020 standards, the most notable change is the addition of DEI standards that REI’s vendors are now asked to follow.

To develop the new rules and ensure their feasibility, REI consulted with brands of various sizes and product categories, as well as with more than a dozen DEI nonprofits, advocates, and ambassadors.

鈥淎s a co-op, we鈥檝e relied for a long time on collective and cooperative action for meaningful change,” said Nicole Browning, REI’s inclusion marketing manager. “This update is rooted in the belief that everyone should have the chance to feel welcome and affirmed when they step out their door. That鈥檚 not the case for most folks, so we鈥檙e looking at ways to reduce barriers to belonging that often show up in outdoor products.鈥

The new standards are listed below exactly as REI has delivered them to vendor companies. This list includes new standards only. Several of the previous standards have been slightly modified as well.

  • REI expects each brand partner to have in place creative controls to prevent cultural appropriation: plagiarism, theft, and/or inappropriate use of designs, patterns, forms, materials, words/names, etc. that are culturally meaningful to and/or originated from Native, Indigenous or other underrepresented communities.
  • REI expects each brand partner to have in place guidelines for marketing assets, photo casting, and production that ensure diverse and inclusive representation across race, age, gender identity/expression, body size, and disability, and expects photography provided to REI reflect the same.
  • REI expects that all wearable products supplied to REI be available in colorways appropriate for a range of skin tones/complexions and that products marketed as 鈥淣ude,鈥 including those with embellishments and/or linings intended to give the impression of bare skin or to mimic skin tone, be available in a range of tones.
  • REI expects each brand partner to have in place creative controls to prevent the use of language in naming conventions (as applied to product, collection, color, or design), product information, marketing assets, etc. that negatively impact underrepresented groups (by reinforcing stereotypes, utilizing slurs, co-opting cultural language, etc.).
  • REI expects that all footwear, packs, sleeping bags and tents supplied to REI be free of long-chain PFAS.
  • REI expects that all ski wax products and gear and clothing treatments supplied to REI be free of long-chain and short-chain PFAS.
  • REI expects each brand partner to have established an action plan for measuring their annual carbon footprint and reducing their carbon emissions in alignment with the recommendations of the United Nations (UN) and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Each brand鈥檚 carbon footprint should be aligned with the GHG Protocol or an equivalent framework and should include emissions from scopes one, two and three.

REI has asked vendors to meet the new standards by the end of 2021, with the exception of the third requirement regarding colorways. The company has set that deadline for 2023 to respect the typical timeline of the product-design process.

Speyer stressed that the goal of the updated standards is not to “kick anyone off the shelves.” Most of REI’s brands were able to meet the first round of standards enacted in 2018, he says, because REI provided resources and assistance to vendors that had trouble changing their practices.

“The idea is not to be punitive. It’s to see progress,” Speyer said. “We鈥檙e excited to partner with our vendors to make this happen.”

REI Adds New Preferred Attributes

As part of the refresh, REI has also added two new programs to its list of preferred attributes鈥攁 collection of voluntary business certifications that vendor brands are encouraged to pursue.

This year, Climate Neutral and Fair for Life were added to the list, bringing the total number of certifications to 15 across ten preferred attribute categories.

In a release published today, REI听pledged that by 2030 “all products on its shelves will have a preferred attribute so that every purchase at REI supports a healthier, cleaner, more equitable planet.”听The company reports that, as of today, more than 3,500 of REI’s products can claim one or more of the current preferred attributes.

The updated list of attributes is below.

List of REI's preferred attributes

鈥淭he products we carry represent our values and one of our greatest opportunities to support better ways of doing business in our industry,鈥 Speyer wrote in a statement today. 鈥淲e want our members and customers to shop with confidence, knowing that the products they purchase at REI are helping build a better future for the people and places they love.鈥

Reactions from the Industry

Mark Galbraith, vice president of product at Osprey, expresses excitement over the new standards, framing them as a challenge to industry players that will accelerate change.

鈥淲e are fully committed to evolving our process,” Galbraith said. “By providing a comprehensive framework for base-level brand expectations and aspirational preferred attributes, REI鈥檚 sustainability standards have encouraged us, and others who are just as dedicated to elevating sustainability, to step up our efforts.鈥

Ammi Borenstein, owner of in Seattle, helped some of REI’s vendors adapt to the standards two years ago. He says that these new goals are ambitious but not unreachable.

“With regard to the new DEI requirements, I think all of these goals are achievable in the timelines laid out,” Borenstein said. “It鈥檚 appropriate to give a business a year to rethink creative controls, guidelines, and marketing practices. It鈥檚 also appropriate to give more runway where it affects product more directly. REI has taken that into consideration.”

Borenstein says that the new central climate requirement鈥攖he establishment of an action plan for measuring and reducing carbon output鈥攊s also feasible.

“A year is more than enough time for brands to establish a plan,” he said. “For many, executing that plan within a year would be ambitious. It鈥檚 probably important for REI to establish a timeline for execution so that vendors aren’t confused on that point. I will almost certainly be reaching out to clarify that point on behalf of my clients.”

Finally,听Borenstein noted that REI leadership was right to craft the standards they way they did鈥攚ith core requirements as well as optional preferred attributes.

“With any plan like this, it鈥檚 important to have a baseline as well as aspirational goals. Nobody is doing this work all at once鈥攊t鈥檚 too difficult. With this kind of framework, it鈥檚 much more accessible.”

The post REI Holds Vendors Accountable for Climate and DEI Practices with New Product Standards appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
REI Goes Carbon Neutral and Pledges New Sustainability Goals /business-journal/issues/rei-goes-carbon-neutral/ Fri, 25 Sep 2020 02:30:07 +0000 /?p=2569009 REI Goes Carbon Neutral and Pledges New Sustainability Goals

The retailer has realized its 14-year plan of transitioning to carbon neutral operations by 2020

The post REI Goes Carbon Neutral and Pledges New Sustainability Goals appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
REI Goes Carbon Neutral and Pledges New Sustainability Goals

REI announced today that the company will become Climate Neutral Certified in 2020, officially completing a goal laid out by former CEO Sally Jewell in 2006. The company has also pledged to reduce its carbon emissions鈥攔aw carbon output, as opposed to net output, which can be reduced through the purchase of carbon credits鈥攂y 55 percent over the next 10 years.

鈥淭he climate crisis is the greatest threat to the future of life outdoors and to REI鈥檚 business,”听REI CEO Eric Artz said in a statement Thursday.听“The science is clear about what we, as a society, need to do to change that future. The world must halve its greenhouse gasses emissions by 2030, so that鈥檚 where REI鈥攁nd the broader outdoor community鈥攎ust lead. Going forward, we鈥檙e embedding the impact of doing business, and the cost, into our business model.鈥

Beginning with emissions in 2020, the company will offset its annual carbon output through the purchase of credits that will cost “in the millions,” said REI senior sustainability manager Andrew Dempsey.

None
REI has pledged to join dozens of other forward-thinking companies that have become Climate Neutral Certified in recent years. (Photo: Courtesy)

“The reality is, being in the business of making stuff means that you’re still going to emit greenhouse gases. We want to hold ourselves accountable and take the cost of those emissions into our business,” Dempsey told 国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal. “As we look to offset our footprint starting in 2020, that cost will be something that we collectively own as an organization. In terms of the specific mechanisms we’ll use to embed that cost in the business, we’re still designing what that process and framework will look like.”

The company will not pay to offset the carbon impact of all products it sells in its stores, Dempsey confirmed. Credits purchased will cover only REI-branded products and company operations.

In the same announcement this morning, REI also laid out an ambitious goal for the next decade: reducing raw emissions by 55 percent over the next ten years. The number was set according to听the latest guidance from the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the company says. According to data in that report, global emissions must be reduced by a minimum of 55 percent by 2030 to avoid the most catastrophic effects of climate change around the world.

鈥淲e must act now, for the generations that follow,” said Artz.

Finally, the company committed Thursday morning to planting 1 million trees around the world by 2030 as part of the听1 Trillion Trees initiative, led by the听Wildlife Conservation Society, World Wildlife Fund, and听BirdLife International.

“This is a journey we’ve been on for a long time and the commitments announced today are the next evolution of that journey,” said Dempsey. “This is an opening statement to engaging further with our community, with our members, with our employees. Reducing our footprint by 55 percent is critical, but it’s through the actions of our community that we can really begin to create more change.”

The post REI Goes Carbon Neutral and Pledges New Sustainability Goals appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Climate Neutral Names First Class of Certified Companies /business-journal/issues/climate-neutral-names-certified-companies/ Thu, 23 Apr 2020 08:07:12 +0000 /?p=2569759 Climate Neutral Names First Class of Certified Companies

The nonprofit has announced its inaugural class of approved businesses

The post Climate Neutral Names First Class of Certified Companies appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Climate Neutral Names First Class of Certified Companies

On Earth Day, the San Francisco-based nonprofit Climate Neutral released its first class of “climate neutral听certified” companies, 71 businesses taking concrete actions to combat climate change.

To qualify for the certification, the businesses had to meet three requirements: verifiably measure their greenhouse gas footprint from making and delivering their products in 2019; purchase carbon credits to offset their entire footprint; and implement strategies to reduce future emissions. The certified companies now have the green light to听display a Climate Neutral Certified label on “packaging, hang tags, websites, and other brand collateral.” The certification lasts for a year before companies must reapply.

鈥淐limate Neutral Certified companies show the world that immediate action on climate change is necessary and possible,鈥 Austin Whitman, CEO of Climate Neutral, said in a statement announcing the news. 鈥淓ven under challenging business conditions, our first group of brands has stayed committed to solving the climate crisis by directing precious resources toward reducing and offsetting their emissions. We鈥檙e proud to be creating a standard for companies鈥 claims to carbon responsibility, and thrilled at what this group of forward-thinking, responsible brands has achieved.鈥

The full list of companies鈥攚hich includes the likes of Klean Kanteen, BioLite, and Gear.com鈥攁s well as details about their carbon footprints, can be found听.

The post Climate Neutral Names First Class of Certified Companies appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Peak Design and Biolite Create New Climate Neutral Certification /business-journal/issues/climate-neutral-helps-brands-achieve-net-zero-carbon-emissions/ Tue, 24 Sep 2019 05:53:57 +0000 /?p=2573595 Peak Design and Biolite Create New Climate Neutral Certification

Think your brand is "eco-friendly"? Put it to the test

The post Peak Design and Biolite Create New Climate Neutral Certification appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Peak Design and Biolite Create New Climate Neutral Certification

With almost every company nowadays using greenwashing words like sustainable, eco-friendly, biodegradable, and nontoxic to describe products, it’s getting more complicated to separate the wheat from the chaff. But a new certification will accredit the true leaders, adding a layer of transparency and setting a higher standard for corporate responsibility.

Officially launched on Monday, Climate Neutral is a听nonprofit program to help companies measure, reduce, and offset their full carbon footprint. And come 2020, companies who achieve net-zero are promised a Climate Neutral Certified label for packaging, hangtags, websites, and other marketing materials鈥攍ike a “Certified Organic” sticker on a banana.

鈥淏ioLite started measuring and offsetting our carbon footprint in 2015,鈥 BioLite CEO Jonathan Cedar said. 鈥淭hrough that experience, we came to realize that achieving carbon neutrality is faster, cheaper, and easier than the common perception. Flash forward to 2018 and our friends at Peak Design reached a similar conclusion, asking 鈥榳hy aren鈥檛 more companies doing this?鈥”

That was the impetus for Climate Neutral. BioLite and Peak Design first introduced the idea to other brands at Outdoor Retailer Summer Market in June. BioLite, Peak Design, and Avocado are the three certified brands so far. Thirty-eight others鈥攊ncluding Klean Kanteen, LifeStraw, Kammok, Miir, Rumpl, Sunski, Gear.com, and Tentsile鈥攈ave signed commitments to monitor their carbon emissions in 2019 and start offsetting in 2020.

Peter Dering, CEO of Peak Design, said this time next year, he’s not sure if there will be 400 or 4,000 brands certified. But he hopes the “label becomes so ubiquitous that governments feel the political freedom to make it law that companies need to take responsibility for their carbon.”

None
A screenshot from Climate Neutral’s “How It Works” page. (Photo: Courtesy)

Climate Neutral’s launch falls in the middle of the Global Climate Strike, when millions of Americans are demanding that lawmakers address climate change. According to a recent poll conducted by The Washington Post and the Kaiser Family Foundation, about eight in ten Americans believe that human activity is fueling climate change.

Researchers say solutions to reverse the climate crisis include depending more on renewable energy, planting trees, reducing food waste, and limiting methane releases.

鈥淐onsumer brands today offer many credentials to a prospective buyer, but none of them directly addresses the brand鈥檚 climate impact,鈥 Climate Neutral CEO Austin Whitman said. 鈥淓ven worse, most brands don鈥檛 know how much they contribute to climate change. Climate Neutral exists to address both of these gaps so that we can make headway in the climate crisis.鈥

Once a company calculates how much energy it uses鈥擯eak Design offset 20,000 tonnes of carbon for $60,000 in 2017, according to The Denver Post鈥擟limate Neutral will help certified companies trade in their carbon credits or connect them to resources听dedicated to capturing methane gas from landfills or restoring degraded forests.

“You can afford to do it. You can’t afford not to,” creators of Climate Neutral said.

The post Peak Design and Biolite Create New Climate Neutral Certification appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>