How Amazon tracks carbon intensity across its operations
At Amazon, we believe that as our strategy to reach net-zero by 2040 evolves, we need to continue to raise the bar on what and how we measure. Measuring carbon emissions across our entire business is complex, and the tools and methodologies available are continuously improving. Each year, we report on our carbon intensity, absolute emissions, and sustainability progress in our Sustainability Report, and we continue to adopt more-precise tools and methodologies to ensure our data is as meaningful and as representative of our decarbonization journey as possible. Carbon intensity — the amount of emissions per unit of activity or production — is one of the most important tools for tracking decarbonization progress. But not all activities are the same. Across industries, some of the most meaningful intensity metrics are sector specific, tied to the actual activity being decarbonized, across buildings, energy, transportation, and products and beyond. Examples of metrics used by companies include carbon dioxide equivalent per megawatt-hour for electricity, per square foot for building decarbonization, and per kilometer for transport. At Amazon, we apply the same principle: we are developing intensity metrics tailored to specific business activities, so we can measure what matters most. Emissions per unit shipped For Amazon’s retail operations, we track carbon emissions per unit shipped. This metric matters because it directly reflects the efficiency of our delivery operations at scale. We’ve reduced emissions per unit shipped every year since 2019, resulting in a carbon intensity reduction of 39% at the end of 2025, relative to 2019. As we ship more packages, we’re doing so with less carbon per unit, and our investments in carbon-free energy, smarter routing, lighter packaging, low-carbon fuels, alternative transportation methods (like rail versus road or air), and electric vehicles are all translating into real per-unit reductions. We also track carbon intensity at the regional and country level to understand geographic variation and target interventions accordingly. It’s the clearest measure of whether we’re decoupling delivery growth from emissions growth. Why this is unique to Amazon Amazon is more than a traditional logistics company: we’re also a pharmacy, a grocery store, a cloud services company, a movie studio, a device manufacturer, a satellite business, and much more. As a result, our emissions span the entire value chain — from the manufacture of goods, long-haul shipping, and air freight to warehousing and distribution and middle-mile and last-mile delivery. Amazon’s decarbonization efforts require strategies that can address significant portions of global transportation and supply chains simultaneously. That breadth creates complexity — and opportunity. Solutions that we develop together with our suppliers and partners don’t only stay within the four walls of Amazon; they have the potential to drive decarbonization across multiple industries at once. This is a responsibility we take seriously: we’re proud of our progress and want to share what we are learning along the way. Simplifying our economic intensity metric Part of sharing what we learn is being transparent about how we measure and what we change. One change that we’ve made recently is in our economic carbon intensity indicator. In our 2025 reporting, we updated this from grams of carbon dioxide equivalent per dollar of gross merchandise sales (gCO2e/$GMS) to grams of carbon dioxide equivalent per dollar of revenue (gCO2e/$Revenue). Revenue is publicly reported, widely understood, and aligns with how most companies disclose the carbon intensity of their operations— making our progress easier to compare with the rest of the industry’s. This update does not change our year-over-year trajectory. Looking ahead Climate science and carbon accounting are not static, and as the science and our own operations evolve, we’ll continue to refine how we track and report our progress. We’re proud of our Climate Pledge goal to reach net-zero carbon by 2040. We’ll continue updating how we measure, so our data always reflects the most precise and meaningful picture of where we are and where we’re headed. To learn more about Amazon’s carbon methodology, visit our Sustainability reporting website.