Patagonia is an outdoor apparel retailer based in the United States. Its headquarters are in Ventura, California, and it was created by Yvon Chouinard in 1973.  In a variety of categories, including climate change, pollution and toxics, human rights, supply chain management, animal rights, social financing, and political activity, Patagonia has performed well. Is Patagonia actually investing in environmental, human, and employee protection, or are they just putting numbers up?

First and foremost, Patagonia’s most important strategy is environmental protection. This firm cares deeply about the environment and contributes a significant amount of money to combat climate change. According to BBC news, “a $10 million (ÂŁ7.83 million) donation was made by Patagonia to help combat climate change in August 2019” ( Ethical Consumer, 2020). Futthermore, Patagonia has made significant progress in terms of modifying underwear packaging to help protect the environment from excessive plastic and trash. According to Patagonia statistics, “this practice kept twelve tons of material from being shipped around the world and eventually being discarded and dumped into landfills, and it saved the company $150,000 in unnecessary packaging” (Chouinard, 2016, p. 160). Patagonia is one of the firms that is concerned about the environment and working to preserve it for future generations. 

This firm is concerned not only about the environment, but also about the quality of the product, and it will not sell messes to its devoted consumers who would be unsatisfied. According to Chouinard, “Patagonia’s profits are directly tied to the quality of  their product and a quality presentation will always outsell messiness” ( 2016, p. 159). Moreover, Patagonia is not exerting undue pressure on customers to pay higher taxes; rather, they are charging their fair portion of what is required of them. According to Chouinard, “We don’t play games with the taxman or auditor. Our tax strategy is to pay our fair share but not a penny more” ( 2016, p.162 ). Patagonia’s sole goal is to remain a small, privately held company so that they may continue to focus on doing good.

Rajwant Kaur and Rajni Bala

References

Patagonia Outdoor Clothing & Gear. (n.d.). Retrieved April 10, 2022, from https://www.patagonia.com/home/

 How ethical is Patagonia’s work? Ethical Consumer. (2020, March 20). Retrieved April 10, 2022, from https://www.ethicalconsumer.org/company-profile/patagonia-works

Chouinard, Y. (2016). Let my people go surfing: The education of a reluctant businessman, including 10 more years of business, is unusual. Penguin Books.