New sustainability plan for Washington State Ferries
Washington State Ferries released a two-year action plan to improve air quality, protect orca whales and reduce emissions and waste.
Source: inhabitat.com
Washington State Ferries released a two-year action plan to improve air quality, protect orca whales and reduce emissions and waste.
Source: inhabitat.com
Lyft’s co-founders Logan Green and John Zimmer — two entrepreneurs with environmental-leaning and transportation-planning(ish) backgrounds — finally “made it” in the Silicon Valley sense. On Friday, the ride-hailing company filed an S-1, indicating that it plans to go public soon. This particular document is often times the first glimpse at a private company’s financials and overall plans, and Lyft’s S-1 doesn’t disappoint. The main thing that the S-1 reveals to me is the yawning gap between the founders’ vision of Lyft as a sustainable transportation company and the reality that Lyft faces in operating a ride-hailing company that relies on individual gas-powered vehicles in an ultra-competitive market. Lyft’s founders write: “It’s time to redesign our cities around people, not cars.”
Freight trucks account for 23 percent of U.S. transportation. Transportation is the No. 1 source of greenhouse gas emissions in America. The country’s freight industry is in no position to ignore its impact on the environment and the greater good.
Digital sales are helping farmers make up for business from shuttered restaurants, but not everyone can afford this fresh product and meat, raising questions about long-term sustainability.
In this #ContentChat, our community joined to discuss the various communities they are part of, what makes these groups so great, and tips for keeping communities going for the long haul.
In recent years, sustainability has become a gimmick used by fast-fashion retailers to reach young buyers. But smaller brands are still setting the standards for environment consciousness in the industry.
Flipkart said that as of August 1, 2019, it has achieved a 25 percent reduction in single-use plastic.