Equilibrium & Sustainability

Equilibrium/Sustainability — Yoga teachers take aim at Lululemon over coal

HOLD FOR SWAYNE HALL -- In this Monday, June 5, 2017 photo a Lululemon Athletica logo hangs outside a store location in Dedham, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Yoga teachers around the world are petitioning athleticwear giant Lululemon to bring its manufacturing practices up to speed with the sustainable attitudes touted in its marketing campaigns. 

In an open letter sent on Wednesday, hundreds of yoga instructors from around the world accused the firm of powering almost half of its textile operations with climate-warming coal. 

“Lululemon’s reliance on coal as a source of energy is extremely harmful to people and the environment, particularly in countries like Vietnam, Cambodia, China, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, where its products are made,” the authors wrote. 

The letter — which was penned by environmental campaigners at Action Speaks Louder and Stand.earth — cited a 2021 Harvard study that found that fossil fuel pollution is responsible for 1 in 5 deaths worldwide

“They really stand out with a huge disconnect between what they say they value and what they do,” Action Speaks Louder head of campaigns Laura Kelly told The Guardian. 


Kelly noted that much of the company’s bottom-up marketing model was built by taking advantage of grassroots networks within the yoga community.  

“Given lululemon’s influence in the market, it’s important for people buying their clothes to understand these two faces,” she said. 

In a statement to the Guardian, Lululemon representatives pointed to steps they had taken to cut fossil fuel use in their stores and offices, while stressing their commitment “to continuing to innovate across the supply chain” and “actively working with industry partners to be a part of the solution.” 

Welcome to Equilibrium, a newsletter that tracks the growing global battle over the future of sustainability. We’re Saul Elbein and Sharon Udasin. Send us tips and feedback. A friend forward this newsletter to you? Subscribe here.

Today we’ll start with an EU proposal that aims to reduce the bloc’s soaring energy prices, followed by a look at President Biden’s ongoing push for electric vehicle adoption. Then we’ll explore a new link between air pollution and irregular heart rhythms in teens.  

Nearly $1B announced for EV chargers 

About $900 million in federal funds will be released this week to build electric vehicle (EV) charging stations across 35 states, President Biden announced at the Detroit Auto Show on Wednesday.

The White House was promoting a sharp increase in federal purchases of electric vehicles, Reuters reported.

“A fully electric transportation sector is going to be made in America,” White House National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi said, according to the outlet.

⚡️  ALL ABOUT THE CREDITS

The president was also in Detroit to promote the extensive package of tax credits in Democrats’ new climate and health care spending package, the Inflation Reduction Act, The Associated Press reported.   

That package is encouraging investment across the economy through several mechanisms:  

A new credit market: Corporations are racing to set up a new matchmaking system, to trade clean energy tax-credits, The Wall Street Journal reported. 

Easy ESG: To get around this problem, the law allows energy companies to form long-term partnerships with corporations like banks that trade cash for the tax credits, the Journal reported. 

Better batteries: Massachusetts-based startup Ascend Elements aims to expand its industrial-scale EV battery recycling across the U.S. Southeast — and they’ve received a big boost from the Inflation Reduction Act, company representatives told the Journal. 

The recycling startup aims to expand existing facilities in Georgia while building a new $1 billion facility in Kentucky, according to a statement issued earlier this month. 

Carbon capture boost: Talos Energy, a small oil company, has been beating out oil majors like Exxon for multibillion-dollar contracts — thanks to the company’s startup carbon capture unit, which injects carbon dioxide into underground cavities, Reuters reported.

Risk of greenwashing? But there’s a risk that carbon capture will simply provide cover for more fossil fuel emissions, and that the technology is “going to become the next generation of ESG tomfoolery,” Tyson Slocum of Public Citizen told Reuters. 

🛢  CLIMATE BILL TO FUEL GULF COAST OIL BOOM  

The new climate and health care bill will require the federal government to release hundreds of millions of acres in Gulf Coast sea and wetland ecosystems for new oil and gas drilling, The New York Times reported. 

 
Gulf shrimpers fear oil increase: It’s not lost on some Louisiana shrimpers that the federal expansion in Gulf oil drilling comes at the same time as extensive efforts to protect the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts, according to the Times. 

No repairs in sight: There is also no money in the new climate law to repair more than 8,600 miles of offshore pipelines through the area, the Times reported. 

EU official unveils proposals to battle energy crisis 

The European Commission proposed emergency measures on Wednesday aimed at quelling an energy crisis that is rattling the continent amid Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine. 

Market manipulation: The plans — which EU member states must still approve — would serve to tackle soaring prices exacerbated by “a severe mismatch between energy demand and supply,” according to the commission.  

“Russia keeps on actively manipulating our energy market,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Wednesday, while announcing the proposal in a State of the European Union address

Reducing demand: Chief among the proposed actions — which von der Leyen said could raise more than $140 billion for member states — are measures to reduce energy demand.  

More action needed: While the EU has diversified its supplies away from Russia — now importing 9 percent of its gas from Moscow rather than last year’s 40 percent — von der Leyen stressed that these steps have proved insufficient. 

“Gas prices have risen by more than 10 times compared to before the pandemic,” she said.  

U.S. has pledged to help: Last week, Secretary of State Antony Blinken stressed that the U.S. “is doing everything in its power” to offer support.   

Proposed profit cap: As the bloc braces for difficult months ahead, the European Commission also recommended a profit cap on energy producers — pitched as aiming to help consumers. 

“In these times it is wrong to receive extraordinary record profits benefitting from war and on the back of consumers,” von der Leyen said. 

Broken markets: Public policy experts emphasized the plan’s focus on demand and the need for emergency measures amid the ongoing energy crisis. 

‘Better late than never’: Gernot Wagner, a climate economist at Columbia Business School, said that the proposed price interventions serve to reduce the burden on both consumers and businesses. 

To find out more details about the EU’s proposal, please click here for the full story. 

Air pollution may spur arrhythmias in teens: study 

Breathing in tiny particles of air pollution may trigger irregular heart rhythms in otherwise healthy teenagers and increase their risk of sudden cardiac death, a new study has found.  

Raising risk: The study, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association on Wednesday, investigated the impact of inhaling fine particulate matter — also known as PM 2.5 — on heart rhythms of adolescents.  

Measuring exposure and rhythms: The researchers analyzed health data from 2010-13 for 322 central Pennsylvania adolescents, all of whom were free of major cardiovascular conditions and were considered at low risk for irregular heart rhythms.  

They measured exposure to fine particulate matter in the air each teen breathed for 24 hours, while tracking their heart rhythms via a small wearable device.  

What did they find? The average PM 2.5 concentration measured was about
17 micrograms of particulate matter per cubic meter of air — well below the Environmental Protection Agency’s standard of 35 micrograms per cubic meter, according to the study.  

To read more details about their findings, please click here for the full story. 

Water Wednesday

Why Beijing won’t be going to the mat against mosquitos, the U.S. Census reveals new “center of population’” and China’s top nuclear scientist says fusion power is closer than many think. 

Chinese authorities nix plans to eradicate mosquitoes 

US Census, NOAA announce new US ‘center of population’  

Chinese expert promises fusion power within decade 

Please visit The Hill’s Sustainability section online for the web version of this newsletter and more stories. We’ll see you tomorrow.

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