Amazon Employees Call for a Company-Wide Climate Change PlanThis doesn't guarantee that Bezos and crew will listen.

ByJon Fingas

This story originally appeared onEngadget

Elaine Thompson | AP Images

Amazon is the next tech giant to face mountingcalls to actionfrom its employees. A total of 3,541 employees havepublishedan open letter asking Jeff Bezos and other leaders to adopt a shareholder resolution and release a "company-wide" climate change plan meeting their terms. Some are clarifications of existing initiatives, while others would require a significant shake-up in its existing strategy.

The workers called for a "complete" end to the use of fossil fuels, not just carbon offsets. Those still leave lasting effects, such as the diesel pollution from delivery vans. The employees also demanded a halt to all solutions designed for the fossil fuel industry, such as the AWS for Oil & Gas initiative thatdrew criticismearlier in the week. Further, the staffers wanted any goals to be consistent with theIPCC's climate change report, with emissions cut in half by 2030 and reduced to zero by 2050. Amazon would also be asked to press for environmentally friendly political policies, and would have to treat staff fairly if climate change led to disruptions.

The letter argued that Amazon fell well short of those goals. It hadn't set a timetable for reaching its goal of shifting completely to renewable energy. TheShipment Zeroplan, meanwhile, only committed to net carbon reductions and didn't include plans to reduce overall emissions. Workers also balked at Amazon donating to 68 members of Congress who've consistently voted against climate change legislation.

Amazon didn't directly address the letter in astatementto theNew York Times. Instead, it reiterated its existing promises, including Shipment Zero as well as plans to reveal its company-level carbon footprint and "related goals and programs" later in 2019. Itannounced计划本周风电场在爱尔兰,西南eden and the U.S.

Will Bezos and crew implement changes? It's difficult to say. It only took roughly 2,500 employees to convince Google toditch its controversial AI advisory council, but Google has been more responsive to campaigns as a whole. Activists and other critics haveblasted Amazon's environmental practicesfor years with only partial acknowledgment, and it took years for the firm to answer calls forimproved pay. Still, it's hard to ignore the employees themselves -- Amazon might not want to be seen as tone deaf, even if the letter participants represent less than 5.5 percent of its American workforce.

Wavy Line
Jon Fingas is an associate editor at Engadget.

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