More specifically, Bezos punted to our Sustainability Director (Amazon doesn't have a SVP or VP of Sustainability) even though we addressed the question directly to him. She also didn't answer saying, "nothing to share today... more to come this year."
"As the largest grocer in the U.S., Walmart worked with its supply chain and asked for changes at the farm level, helping farmers more precisely apply fertilizer, which saved them money and reduced emissions."
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From Forbes: Walmart -- "in just two years, more than 1,000 suppliers have signed on to the initiative and collectively avoided 93 million metric tons of emissions towards the billion-ton GHG reduction goal"https://www.forbes.com/sites/edfenergyexchange/2019/04/26/employees-of-the-month-amazons-climate-activists/#2a343b006be2 …
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A: You can't really say "from Forbes" when it's a contributor (glorified blogger, unpaid) and not a staff writer (paid journalist) B: The methodology for Walmart's calculation is self-report from suppliers - https://www.walmartsustainabilityhub.com/media-library/document/2018-project-gigaton-accounting-methodology/_proxyDocument?id=00000165-159f-d0cc-ab77-95ff84350000 … What's the validity on that?
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