- Amazon’s air freight pollution increased 67% from 2019 to 2023, with aviation contributing over 42% of the carbon footprint for U.S. package deliveries.
- Amazon’s delivery van pollution increased over 190% due to continued reliance on fossil fuel-powered vehicles.
- Amazon’s heavy-duty truck pollution jumped 51%, making trucks the second-largest source of shipping-related pollution.
- Amazon’s marine shipping pollution rose 26%, highlighting Amazon’s reliance on pollutive international shipping routes.
These trends, coupled with Amazon’s reported labor violations, have fueled criticism of the company’s so-called “Climate Pledge.” Despite its promise to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2040, Amazon’s sustainability measures have been described by environmental advocates as woefully insufficient and misleading. The Prime Polluter report serves as a wake-up call for UW students mapping out their future career paths, emphasizing the urgent need for transformative action in the logistics sector.
“Amazon’s aggressive recruitment at universities like UW is part of its strategy to greenwash its reputation, despite being one of the worst polluters in logistics and shipping. Through this event, we’re challenging students to think critically about their career choices and demand real climate accountability from corporations,” said Josh Archer, Senior Global Corporate Campaigner at Stand.earth.
“Prospective employees have a right to know about Amazon’s broken climate promises. Amazon earned a ‘D’ on Ship It Zero’s Decarbonization Report Card in 2023, and the company has yet to course-correct. Frontline communities worldwide are suffering from fossil-fuel pollution while the company drags its feet. Amazon must turn the ship around — not just for the health of portside communities, but for the workers and future employees who rightfully expect better from corporations,” said Jonathan Butler (they/them), Pacific Environment’s Climate Campaign Manager for Corporate and lead representative of the Ship It Zero campaign.
The mock career fair included:
- Activists dressed as Amazon recruiters, sarcastically promoting the company’s polluting practices and labor violations.
- Banners with slogans like “Prime Polluter” and “Don’t Work for Amazon,” drawing attention to the company’s troubling environmental and social record.
- Pocket-sized handouts listing key statistics from the Prime Polluter report and reasons to avoid Amazon as an employer.