Amazon have recently announced 18 new utility-scale wind and solar energy projects across the U.S., Finland, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the U.K. Amazon now has 274 renewable energy projects globally and is on a path to power 100% of its business operations with renewable energy by 2025—five years earlier than its original 2030 commitment.
“We are moving quickly and deliberately to reduce our carbon emissions and address the climate crisis, Significant investments in renewable energy globally are an important step in delivering on The Climate Pledge, our commitment to reach net-zero carbon by 2040, 10 years ahead of the Paris Agreement. Renewable energy projects also bring new investment, green jobs, and advance the decarbonization of the electricity systems in communities around the world.”
– Kara Hurst, vice president of worldwide sustainability at Amazon
These new utility-scale wind and solar projects bring Amazon’s total committed renewable electricity production capacity to more than 12 GW and 33,700 gigawatt hours (GWh) when the projects become fully operational, or electricity output equivalent to powering more than 3 million U.S. homes for a year. The projects will supply renewable energy for Amazon’s corporate offices, fulfillment centers, and Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centers that support millions of customers globally. The projects will also help Amazon meet its commitment to produce the clean energy equivalent of the electricity used by all consumer Echo devices. The amount of clean energy produced by these projects will avoid the equivalent of the annual emissions of nearly 3 million cars in the U.S. each year, or about 13.7 million metric tons.
“Amazon is wasting no time demonstrating that they are fully committed to a clean energy future for all. At COP26, the world agreed we needed bigger and bolder ambitions around global carbon reduction from all sectors. With hundreds of renewable energy projects already underway, Amazon is a model for the level of urgency and action we need from the private sector to combat the climate crisis.”
– Gregory Wetstone, CEO, The American Council on Renewable Energy
One Response
I was chatting with a lad the other night and he was telling me about how much they were spending getting the logistics fleet electrical. They needed some cable a did not blink at spending a million on it. Miles and miles of cables and charging points at the Dunfermline Camp.
Big PR campaign to counter that they make there bucks from China factories spewing emissions, slave labour workforces and huge container ships.
Anyway they will all be electrical up here soon and the rest will be still playing catch up.