<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/nov/27/its-critical-can-microsoft-make-good-on-its-climate-ambitions>

When the UN’s landmark climate report was released in 2018, calling for urgent 
and unprecedented changes, Microsoft executives were told to “commit it to 
memory”, said Elizabeth Willmott, who leads the company’s carbon program. “And 
so we did.”

The report warned the world must reach net-zero emissions by 2050 in order to 
avert catastrophic climate change. To achieve this, not only must the emissions 
released by countries and companies be dramatically curtailed, but billions of 
tons of carbon dioxide must be sucked out of the atmosphere.

These findings directly informed Microsoft’s climate policy, said Willmott. In 
January 2020, the company announced that it would be carbon negative by 2030 
and by 2050 it would have removed from the atmosphere all the carbon it has 
emitted since it was founded in 1975. By making this pledge, the company joined 
a small group of businesses, including Ikea and the software company Intuit, 
committed to going further than net-zero.

Microsoft is often ranked as a leading business on climate action. Its policies 
– from making it easier for people to repair their devices to launching 
software to help companies measure and manage carbon emissions – have been 
praised for going beyond the company’s own operations to the footprint of its 
suppliers and customers.

“Being a large, well-known brand, and putting a stake in the ground, talking 
publicly for years about the importance of climate change, is really critical,” 
said Simon Fischweicher, head of corporations and supply chains for the 
environmental non-profit CDP North America.
President of Microsoft Brad Smith as the company announced its carbon negative 
plan at Microsoft’s campus in Redmond, Washington, on January 16, 2020.
President of Microsoft Brad Smith as the company announced its carbon negative 
plan at Microsoft’s campus in Redmond, Washington, on January 16, 2020. 
Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters

However, Microsoft has also been criticized for actions that appear to 
contradict its bold rhetoric on climate, including membership of trade 
associations that lobby against climate legislation, contracts with oil and gas 
firms and donations to politicians who obstruct climate policy.

These connections make it “complicit” in efforts to push against climate 
action, said Bill Weihl, a former sustainability executive at Google and 
Facebook and the founder of the advocacy group ClimateVoice.
Scaling up goals

Microsoft has been operating as a carbon-neutral company for nearly a decade, a 
feat it has achieved through buying carbon offsets as well as securing 
renewable power directly from clean energy companies and installing onsite 
renewable energy, such as solar panels at its offices.

Since 2012, Microsoft has also implemented an internal carbon fee, currently 
set at $15 a metric ton, making business units pay for emissions related to 
their operations and electricity, as well as from business air travel.

“The money gets collected and spent,” said Willmott, whose carbon management 
team uses the money to fund initiatives such as buying clean energy and carbon 
offsets. “I have to pinch myself regularly because that was something we 
dreamed about and didn’t think was actually going to happen.”

It’s a “powerful mechanism”, says Fischweicher, to push a company to think more 
deeply about the impact of its activities: “To pay a fee, you start to think 
about: ‘What can I do to reduce that so I have more money in my budget?’”

But the company has recognized that much more is required to tackle the climate 
crisis and the plan to go carbon negative was a big step up in ambitions.

Microsoft has laid out milestones for reaching the target. By 2025, it aims to 
reduce the emissions from its direct operations to “near zero” through gains in 
energy efficiency and using 100% renewable energy. By 2030, it has committed to 
reducing by at least 50% its direct emissions and those from its supply chain.

The company’s supply chain – more than 58,000 suppliers provide everything from 
office furniture to the metals and plastics used in its products – makes up the 
bulk of its emissions. Last year, the company implemented a carbon reporting 
requirement for suppliers and it extended the internal carbon fee to cover 
supply chain emissions.

But in order to remove more emissions than it produces, the company will rely 
heavily on carbon removal projects. These include nature-based initiatives such 
as funding reforestation projects, but the company is also pinning its hopes on 
technology. Microsoft is investing $1bn to support emerging technology that can 
reduce, capture and remove carbon from the air.

As part of this, the company has invested in and purchased carbon removal from 
Climeworks, which operates the world’s largest direct air capture plant, in 
Iceland, removing CO2 from the air and trapping it in rock underground.
Climeworks direct air capture plant near Reykjavik, Iceland.
Climeworks direct air capture plant near Reykjavik, Iceland. Photograph: 
Halldor Kolbeins/AFP/Getty Images

In 2020, Microsoft removed 1.3m metric tons of carbon through a range of 
initiatives from nature based programs to carbon capture technology.

However, these projects face obstacles. Relying on forests and soil to trap 
endless amounts of carbon is increasingly difficult in the face of worsening 
wildfires, pests and changes in land use. And carbon removal technology is not 
anywhere near the scale needed. There are 19 direct air capture (DAC) plants in 
operation globally, capturing just over 100,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide 
each year. The International Energy Agency has estimated that reaching net zero 
by 2050 would require the world to scale up DAC to capture more than 85m tons 
each year by 2030 and around 980m tons a year by 2050.

It’s a challenge that Microsoft is grappling with. The number and type of 
projects currently available is “far short of what we need”, said Willmott. By 
2030, the company estimates, it will need to remove 5m to 6m tons of carbon. 
This means the technology will need to be considerably scaled up to meet 
Microsoft’s demands alone, she said, “and that’s to say nothing of the fact 
that there’s a real spike in corporate demand”.
The Canadian firm Carbon Engineering’s pilot plant pellet reactor and 
associated equipment.
Climate crisis: do we need millions of machines sucking CO2 from the air?
Read more

It’s not just the amount of viable carbon capture projects that’s lacking, 
Willmot said; there’s also a quality issue. The industry doesn’t fully 
distinguish between avoided emissions and those that are actually removed from 
the atmosphere, she said. More robust quality standards would go a long way to 
making sure “it’s not quite a wild, wild west that it is today”, Willmot said.

“[Microsoft is] opening up new conversations about historical emissions without 
having all the answers,” said Aoife Brophy, departmental research lecturer in 
innovation and enterprise at the University of Oxford’s Saïd Business School. 
“Leaders on climate need to acknowledge the complexity of the problem and be 
transparent about the fact that there are not always clear solutions.”

Microsoft’s focus on historical emissions could also help spur a deeper 
conversation, she said, about “responsibility for the past, and may lead to 
much better ways to think about issues like climate justice that have not yet 
been adequately addressed by companies”.
A wider influence

The modern corporate sustainability movement requires companies to also 
consider their impacts on customers, peers and society more broadly. This shift 
in perspective, said Fischweicher, “is a really critical turning-point moment … 
because what you’re also talking about is shifting your business model overall”.

To Microsoft’s critics, this means the company should reconsider its work with 
oil companies. The same week that Microsoft made its carbon-negative 
announcement, it sponsored an oil conference in Saudi Arabia. A 2020 Greenpeace 
report digging into tech companies’ work with the oil and gas industry – such 
as providing software to support fossil fuel extraction – found that its 
contract with ExxonMobil “could lead to emissions greater than 20% of 
Microsoft’s annual carbon footprint”.

The company also spent about $200,000 during the 2020 US election cycle 
supporting politicians with a history of climate denial. And this October, 
Microsoft – along with other corporations – was criticized by the watchdog 
group Accountable.US for its membership of trade organizations with a history 
of fighting climate crisis legislation, including the Business Roundtable and 
the US Chamber of Commerce. Most recently, these groups have lobbied against 
climate legislation included under Joe Biden’s reconciliation bill.
The Apple Inc. logo is seen hanging at the entrance to the Apple store on 5th 
Avenue in New York
Apple and Disney among companies backing groups against US climate bill
Read more

“I feel really strongly that we need to be able to work with everyone to make 
this transition to a low-carbon economy in the future,” said Willmott, 
responding to these criticisms. “I really think it’s important not to 
villainize any particular sector, or villainize any particular entities, but 
rather really work hard from within to shape the journey.”

Weihl, whose organization ClimateVoice is calling on Microsoft and others to 
devote one-fifth of their lobbying dollars to climate policy in 2021, remains 
skeptical. “Companies are putting their narrow self-interest ahead of actually 
addressing the climate crisis at scale,” he said. “Silence and unwillingness to 
publicly distance themselves [from these groups] is not neutrality, it’s 
complicity.”

Whether it’s Microsoft’s customers and affiliations or the type of work it 
does, experts agree the company’s size and political heft as well as its 
position within trade groups give it immense power – and it’s all about how the 
company chooses to use it.

“Tech companies shape how we engage with the world, and the information we see 
on a daily basis,” said Brophy. “We need to think of impact beyond measuring 
emissions and consider ways in which technology can be used to create change 
across different systems.”

Microsoft’s climate commitments are laudable, she said, but ultimately success 
will require collective action. “The biggest challenge is that Microsoft’s 
goals cannot be achieved by Microsoft alone,” said Brophy. “But that’s exactly 
what we need to see companies across industries doing more of: coming out and 
being bold, recognizing that they need to be systems leaders.”
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