September 19, 2022 - News

Sustainability as Strategy: Patagonia Founder Gives Company to Environmental Trusts

Nike, On, adidas target conscious consumers too.
Patagonia

Patagonia is no longer for-profit. It’s for-planet.

What’s happening: The outdoor brand’s founder Yvon Chouinard transferred all of his family’s shares in the company to two entities: Patagonia Purpose Trust and the Holdfast Collective.

One will uphold the purpose-driven structure of the company. The other will take every dividend earned (~$100M/year) to invest in fighting climate change.

Chouinard sees this as a necessary step forward for all companies:

“Instead of extracting value from nature and transforming it into wealth, we are using the wealth Patagonia creates to protect the source. We’re making Earth our only shareholder. I am dead serious about saving this planet.”

Why it matters: Patagonia has always led by example, driving the apparel industry toward a more sustainable future. And its mission has resonated with consumers — it became a billion-dollar brand late last decade despite giving 1% of its annual earnings to green charities since 1985.

Now, other brands are exploring sustainability as a strategy:

  • Swiss running brand On debuted a resale site for used shoes and garments, launched a recyclable shoe program, and its CO2-based sneaker is a WIP.
  • Nike’s new fabric Forward has a 75% lower carbon footprint compared to standard knit fleece; its first products using it are now available.
  • Last year, adidas and Allbirds collabed to create a shoe with the lowest carbon footprint ever.

Punchline: Some may accuse other companies of greenwashing—using sustainability as a marketing ploy—and some brands do. But, by demonstrating a new corporate structure, Patagonia is gifting a planet-friendly playbook sure to land with both consumers and stakeholders.

Ryan Deer
Ryan Deer
The future of health and wellness in one newsletter

Subscribe for insights on the wellness economy, gyms and studios, preventative healthcare, wearable tech, and more

No thanks.