TechLife News

BIG TECH’S ECO-PLEDGES AREN’T SLOWING ITS PURSUIT OF BIG OIL

Employee activism and outside pressure have pushed big tech companies like Amazon, Microsoft and Google into promising to slash their carbon emissions. But there’s another thing these tech giants aren’t cutting: Their growing business ties to the oil and gas industry.

When Microsoft held an all-staff meeting in September, an employee asked CEO Satya Nadella if it was ethical for the company to be selling its cloud computing services to fossil fuel companies, according to two other Microsoft employees who described the exchange on condition they not be named. Such partnerships, the worker told Nadella, were accelerating the oil companies’ greenhouse gas emissions.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from TechLife News

TechLife News3 min read
Starbucks Is Introducing A Cold Drink Cup Made With Less Plastic
Booming sales of cold drinks at Starbucks have created a problem: growing amounts of plastic waste from the single-use cups that Frappuccinos, Refreshers, cold brews and other iced drinks are served in. The coffee giant said Thursday it plans to alle
TechLife News2 min read
What To Know About Next Week’s Total Solar Eclipse In The Us, Mexico And Canada
North America is on the verge of another masking of the sun. Monday’s total solar eclipse will make landfall along Mexico’s Pacific coast and cross into Texas and 14 other U.S. states, before exiting over Canada. It will last almost twice as long, wi
TechLife News2 min read
Biden Administration Agrees To Provide $6.4 Billion To Samsung For Making Computer Chips In Texas
The Biden administration has reached an agreement to provide up to $6.4 billion in direct funding for Samsung Electronics to develop a computer chip manufacturing and research cluster in Texas. The funding announced this week by the Commerce Departme

Related Books & Audiobooks