Exxon, Apple and other corporate giants will have to disclose all their emissions under California’s new climate laws – that will have a global impact::California is the world’s fifth-largest economy. Laws tested there often spread across the U.S. and around the world.

  • @nottheengineer@feddit.de
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    149 months ago

    Exxon won’t give a shit, but apple probably will. Half of their marketing is greenwashing, so they’ll have to think of something new.

    Maybe some people will also understand that corporations aren’t their friends, but with apple users that’s a rather slim chance.

    • @dependencyInjection@sh.itjust.works
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      119 months ago

      Check this, I worked at Apple on the bar for 3 years and every year we would wear blue for most the year, red for Christmas and get this, green for Earth day.

      So they would ship shirts around the world every year for these. You could use your old ones but they always gave more.

      I brought it up to a manager that the green one is laughable as we are celebrating earth day by shipping green shirts around. I’m pretty sure they stopped it now but it always struck me as insane.

      I also, had some discussions about how well we got treated in the UK but my American counterparts not so much and my Asian counterparts even less, but I always got the we don’t control the Foxconn stuff etc.

      It’s all words really and their bottom line is making money.

    • Flying Squid
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      79 months ago

      Apple is already disclosing that information. So is Google. No one seems to give a shit.

      • @MrSpArkle@lemmy.ca
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        29 months ago

        Not saying we shouldn’t pressure corporations to do better, but one of the unintended consequences here is that Apple’s green initiatives and disclosures are in part simply a product of tight vertical integration. At a certain point pollution is simply resources not optimally exploited and extracted, and those inefficiencies are lost profits. Meeting environmental goals at that point will be easier for large conglomerates than for smaller players, thus encouraging the rise of more conglomerates.