CEOs and other representatives of more than 75 US businesses and trade associations, with combined market valuations of nearly $2.5 trillion, call for federal climate action including carbon pricing.
Just one week after the CEO Climate
Dialogue
— the CEOs of 13 US and global Fortune 500 companies — called on the President
and Congress to institute an economy-wide carbon-pricing policy, today more than
75 businesses — including eBay, Gap, Levi Strauss, Nike, Mars,
Microsoft, PepsiCo and Tesla — joined the call, meeting with a bipartisan group of federal
lawmakers to urge Congress to pass meaningful climate legislation, including a
price on carbon. Collectively, today’s LEAD (Lawmaker Education & Advocacy Day)
on Carbon Pricing is the largest business
gathering on the Hill to advocate for climate legislation in over a decade.
The participating businesses, five of which — BP, Exelon,
LafargeHolcim, PG&E, Shell and Unilever — are also part
of the CEO Climate Dialogue, include 21 Fortune 500 companies; as well as trade
associations, and medium and small businesses from all 50 states, collectively
representing a combined market valuation of nearly $2.5 trillion, and more than
1 million US employees. The businesses calling for a meaningful national carbon
price span across the US economy — including retail giants,
manufacturers, energy majors, healthcare services, food and
beverage companies, outdoors industries and technology companies. A
full list of business participants can be
found here.
“Climate change requires urgent, collective action; including the establishment
of a reliable carbon-pricing system,” says Chris Adamo, VP of Federal
Industry and Affairs at Danone. “We are meeting the challenge
head-on by innovating our business practices, forging new partnerships across
the food and beverage industry, and supporting policy solutions that protect and
preserve our precious natural resources. We have 31 years to fulfill our 2050
goal to be zero net carbon positive, and as the largest Certified B
Corporation
in the world it is also our responsibility to create solutions that drive
long-term change.”
Representatives from these businesses met one-on-one with lawmakers and
congressional staff from both sides of the aisle in the House and the Senate
today, to educate them on the economic impacts of climate change and the need
for comprehensive and effective national climate
policies.
Hosted by Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE), these representatives aim to make the
business case for a strong and effective federal carbon price, and share the
private sector’s vision for comprehensive solutions to tackle climate change.
A New Era for Brand Integrity: Navigating the Greenhush-Greenwash Spectrum
Join us as leaders from Republik, NielsenIQ, Conspirators, Henoscene, be/co, The Guardian and Room & Board analyze what newly expanded notions of brand integrity mean for brands, and how to be smarter about picking language choices that avoid the dangerous extremes of greenhushing and greenwashing — Thurs, May 9, at Brand-Led Culture Change.
“LS&Co. is redoubling our carbon-reduction efforts through industry-leading
targets for our own operations and our supply chain,” said Michael Kobori,
VP of Sustainability at Levi Strauss. “At the same time, we know that we can do
more, faster and cheaper, with government leadership that puts a price on carbon
and helps us to invest in renewable energy.”
Of the more than 75 companies, eight sent their CEOs — including DSM,
Seventh Generation, Rossignol Skis and Nature’s
Path
— to signify their high level of concern for the risks that climate change pose
to their operations and the US economy.
“There is no greater threat to future generations than the climate crisis and
the health of our planet,” said Seventh Generation CEO Joey Bergstein. “The
short-term and long-term benefits of reducing greenhouse gas pollution through
carbon pricing far outweigh the costs. We must act now on this opportunity
before it’s too late.”
This increased private sector engagement with Congress comes at a time when the
impacts and consequences of a warming world are becoming more clear, with recent
scientific reports detailing the effects of climate change in the
US and across the
globe. In addition, a growing number of bipartisan
lawmakers are offering their own carbon-pricing proposals. In the last three
years, Democrats and Republicans collaborated to introduce several different
carbon-pricing bills in both the Senate and the House, including the Market
Choice Act and
the Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend
Act.
Published May 22, 2019 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST
Sustainable Brands Staff