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Sustainability

An Arc'teryx jacket.
Lifestyle

The Quest to Ban the Best Raincoats in the World

Why Patagonia, REI, and just about every other gear retailer are going PFAS-free.

Technology

The Climate Data Wars Are Just Beginning

The effort to measure companies’ carbon footprints is remarkably imprecise — and suddenly more important than ever.

Blue
Technology

The Search for a Somewhat Sustainable Aviation Fuel

Money is pouring in — and deadlines are approaching fast.

Blue
Earth and plastic bottles.

The Corporate Push to End Plastics

Can companies do what the United Nations couldn’t?

Blue
Gary Gensler.

The SEC’s New Climate Rules: A Primer

The long-delayed risk disclosure regulation is almost here.

Technology

How Google Maps Is (Subtly!) Trying to Persuade You to Make Better Choices

Talking to Google Geo’s vice president of sustainability, Yael Maguire.

The Google logo.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

While browsing Google Flights for an escape from the winter doldrums, I recently encountered a notification I hadn’t seen before. One particular return flight from Phoenix to New York was highlighted in light green as avoiding “as much CO2 as 1,400 trees absorb a day.”

I’d seen Google Flights’ emissions estimates before, of course — they’ve been around since 2021 — but this was the first time I’d seen it translate a number like “265 kg CO2e” into something I could actually understand. Suddenly, not picking the flight felt like it would have made me, well, kind of bad.

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Electric Vehicles

Toyota Is Far Less Climate-Friendly Than Most Americans Think

The Prius still lives large in the popular imagination.

A Prius.
<p>Heatmap Illustration/Getty Images</p>

A year ago, the Toyota Prius went from bulbous to badass. The hybrid icon got its most dramatic redesign in two decades, which dispensed with the familiar friendly and rounded look for an angular, almost menacing front end. The vehicle, which once again came in traditional hybrid and plug-in hybrid variants, earned enthusiasm from buyers and plaudits from the auto press. What Toyota didn’t do, curiously, was finally turn the Prius into a true battery electric vehicle.

The world’s largest car company has been among the slowest of the major automakers to embrace 100% electric propulsion. Yet, as Heatmap data shows, such heel-dragging hasn’t dinged Toyota’s green reputation. In our November 2023 survey, Toyota scored the second-highest on perceived sustainability of any automaker.

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