Amazon vows to meet the Paris climate agreement requirements 10 years early
Amazon's CEO Jeff Bezos announced the company's sweeping new efforts to combat climate change and revealed a new corporate pledge to meet the international Paris Agreement 10 years early -- committing to net zero carbon emissions by the year 2040.
Bezos and the advocacy group Global Optimism revealed the "Climate Pledge" at an event Thursday in the nation's capital, with Bezos saying that Amazon is the first to sign the wide-ranging pledge that calls on corporations to bring their carbon emissions to net zero by 2040. This is ten years ahead of the international Paris Agreement's goal of 2050.
The Amazon founder said that if they can meet the Paris Agreement early, any company can.
“We’re done being in the middle of the herd on this issue -- we’ve decided to use our size and scale to make a difference,” Bezos said in a statement. “If a company with as much physical infrastructure as Amazon -- which delivers more than 10 billion items a year -- can meet the Paris Agreement 10 years early, then any company can."
Bezos also committed to switching to 100% renewable energy by 2030 and a $100 million investment in reforestation projects around the world.
As part of the announcement, Amazon also announced that it had ordered 100,000 electric delivery vehicles which will all hit the roads by 2030 -- a step it said will save 4 million metric tons of carbon per year and constitutes the largest order of electric vehicles ever.
The Climate Pledge shows a response from corporations to the growing threat of climate change, even though the U.S. government has withdrawn from the international climate agreement, the Paris Agreement, under the Trump Administration.
Bezos added in a statement that he has been "talking with other CEOs of global companies, and I’m finding a lot of interest in joining the pledge."
Signing the climate pledge "will send an important signal to the market that it’s time to invest in the products and services the signatories will need to meet their commitments."
Christiana Figueres, the UN’s former climate change chief and founding partner of Global Optimism, called on "bold steps by big companies" to drive change in support of a low carbon economy.
"With this step, Amazon also helps many other companies to accelerate their own decarbonization," she said in a statement. "If Amazon can set ambitious goals like this and make significant changes at their scale, we think many more companies should be able to do the same and will accept the challenge. We are excited to have others join."
ABC News' Taylor Dunn contributed to this report.