One of the biggest companies in the world, Amazon, has recently announced its return-to-office mandate and has received criticism for its stand against climate change. Both issues made Amazon employees walk out against the company board.
The protest started a month after a rule requiring employees to show up to work three days a week started. CEO Andy Jassy stated in February that the choice was taken after considering what had been successful during the COVID-19 epidemic and staff findings that people were generally more engaged in person.
After Amazon’s return-to-office policy was disclosed, project manager Pamela Hayter created the “Remote Advocacy” internal Slack channel. Its 33,000 members discuss personal experiences with the return-to-office policy.
Around 1,000 of the 2,000 workers who left their jobs gathered outside the Spheres, the enormous glass domes that serve as the centerpiece of Amazon’s Seattle headquarters. The worker group Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, which has consistently pressured the e-retailer on its stance on climate change, played a part in organizing the walkout. The group has also created a webpage to give more details about the protest.
A “lack of trust in company leadership’s decision making.”
According to the group, Amazon employees walk out to point out a “lack of trust in company leadership’s decision-making.” The e-retail giant has also laid off some of its workforce recently, parting ways with 27,000 jobs in several divisions, including cloud computing, advertising, and retail divisions.
“Today looks like it might be the start of a new chapter in Amazon’s history, when tech workers coming out of the pandemic stood up and said we still want a say in this company and the direction of this company. We still want a say in the important decisions that affect all of our lives, and tech workers are going to stand up for ourselves, for each other, for our families, the communities where Amazon operates and for life on planet Earth.”
Eliza Pan, a cofounder of AECJ and a former program manager at Amazon
With posters reading “Amazon strive harder” and “Earth’s best employer?” workers gathered on a green park near office buildings and an airstream that was handing out free bananas to nearby employees. The attendance wasn’t only in-person as many employees have supported the protests online. Amazon employees walk out to change how things are handled within the company.
Amazon employees walk out against the board
The strike is also being used by workers to raise awareness of their worries that Amazon isn’t living up to its climate obligations. The company has a significant carbon footprint since it depends on fossil fuels to run the planes, trucks, and vans that transport items around the globe. Amazon employees have been open in their criticism of the company’s methods.
Amazon stated its goals to deploy 100,000 electric delivery trucks by 2030 and to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2040 in its annual letter to investors. However, the organizers of the walkout argue that the corporation must go further and pledge to have zero emissions by 2030.
“While we all would like to get there tomorrow, for companies like ours who consume a lot of power and have very substantial transportation, packaging, and physical building assets, it’ll take time to accomplish.”
An Amazon spokesperson said in a statement.
In 2021, compared to 2019, the year it introduced its “Climate Pledge” plan, Amazon’s carbon emissions increased by 40%, according to its most recent sustainability report.
One of Amazon’s climate targets, known as Shipment Zero, in which the corporation promised to make 50% of all of its shipments carbon neutral by 2030, was recently dropped. Amazon said that it will concentrate on its more comprehensive Climate Pledge, which calls for reaching net-zero carbon emissions by 2040. The Amazon employees walk out to make a change within the company policies.