The Environmental Cost of Amazon's Prime Day
Jordan Davidson Jul. 15, 2019 11:34AM
It's Prime Day! The day when thousands of increasingly
absurd items are discounted so deeply that you suddenly need items you never
knew existed. Yes, I do need a hotdog shaped toaster next to me while I watch
this Fast & Furious seven movie box set! And I need it in my house today!
"The concept of Amazon Prime pushes us towards more
emissions," said Dan Sperling, a professor at UC Davis, told Grist.
"It makes the marginal cost of purchases very small, so you have
motivation to buy more. And of course, that's what Amazon wants."
The low-costs and free returns also create an efficiency
paradox — people not only start to consume more when prices are low, but they
will buy 10 pairs of shoes and return nine of them, using more and more plastic
foam, tape, and boxes, as Ozy reports.
A Boeing 737-800 BCF (Boeing Converted Freighter) is marked
"Prime Air" as part of Amazon Prime's freight aircraft during the
53rd International Paris Air Show at Le Bourget Airport near Paris, France on
June 22. Mustafa Yalcin / Anadolu Agency / Getty Images
The demand for faster and faster delivery times reveals the
dark side of summertime's Black Friday.
And, it's not just Amazon getting in on the action and
promising absurdly quick deliveries. Walmart, eBay and Target are all offering
unbelievable bargains on fast, free shipments.
"The time in transit has a direct relationship to the
environmental impact," said Patrick Browne, director of global
sustainability at UPS, as CNN reported. "I don't think the average
consumer understands the environmental impact of having something tomorrow vs.
two days from now. The more time you give me, the more efficient I can
be."
But UPS trucks are headed the wrong way on emissions. As CNN
reported, UPS disclosed in 2017 that the e-commerce boom decreased the number
of packages it dropped off per mile, leading to more trucks on the road and
higher greenhouse gas emissions.
If shippers had more time, they could consolidate packages,
which would reduce the number of cars and trucks required to deliver them.
Warehouses could also cut down on packaging waste. The uptick in planes, trucks
and packaging material in the name of one-day or same-day shipping has added
congestion to cities, pollutants in the air, and cardboard to landfills,
according to Buzzfeed News.
If UPS and other delivery chains could consolidate products
and deliver them on one route to a bunch of homes, then buying from home could
be a green way to shop. In fact, a University of Washington study published in
the Journal of Transportation Research Forum found that grocery delivery could
cut between 80 percent and 90 percent of carbon emissions compared to consumers
driving to the store to shop for their items.
Yet, the efficiency changes immediately if items have to
travel long distances and arrive immediately, according to the study's lead
author, Anne Goodchild, as CNN reported. Then there are few opportunities for
putting a batch of deliveries together.
"The efficiency and those benefits of delivery came
from consolidation and sharing a big vehicle," Goodchild said. "And
as we move away from that, if we move towards basically paying someone to make
a trip for us, a lot of those benefits are eroded.
So far, customers don't seem to care. Amazon Prime's
signature benefit is fast and free shipping — a perk that has ushered in more
than 100 million subscribers who pay an annual $119 membership fee.
"The concept of Amazon Prime pushes us towards more
emissions," said Dan Sperling, a professor at UC Davis, told Grist.
"It makes the marginal cost of purchases very small, so you have
motivation to buy more. And of course, that's what Amazon wants."
The low-costs and free returns also create an efficiency
paradox — people not only start to consume more when prices are low, but they
will buy 10 pairs of shoes and return nine of them, using more and more plastic
foam, tape, and boxes, as Ozy reports.
While Amazon won't end prime day or next day deliveries or
even same-day deliveries in select cities, they have acknowledged the impact of
their practices and started several campaigns to reduce their emissions. It
offers "Free No-Rush Shipping," which lets the consumer choose a
slower delivery option and receive rewards on future purchases or an immediate
discount towards eBooks, movies or Prime Pantry groceries. That option allows
Amazon and its distributors to pack trucks more efficiently.
Earlier this year, Amazon also announced its Shipment Zero
plan, which is "Amazon's vision to make all Amazon shipments net zero
carbon, with 50% of all shipments net zero by 2030," according to its own
press release.
Yet, Amazon is far from environmentally friendly. After all,
it recently bought 20,000 trucks that run on fossil fuels and never announced
plans to move towards electric vehicles, as CNN reported.
"I would not say [Amazon is] pretty environmentally
friendly," said Miguel Jaller, the co-director of the Sustainable Freight
Research Center at the Institute of Transportation Studies at UC Davis, as CNN
reported. "I would say less environmentally bad than others."
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