A new initiative involving Amazon, eBay and Etsy is helping bring Tesla electric trucks into real freight operations. The Center for Green Market Activation (GMA), a nonprofit group, is planning a pilot program. This project aims to put about 40 all-electric Tesla Semi trucks on the road between Dallas and Houston. The goal is to reduce emissions from freight transport by using cleaner heavy-duty vehicles.
Under the plan, companies pay for “environmental attribute certificates” (EACs). These certificates represent the emissions savings from electric trucks.
Buyers can use the certificates to reduce their reported Scope 3 emissions. This applies even if they don’t directly use the trucks. All charging for the electric trucks is planned to be covered by renewable energy certificates to support clean power use.
Let’s explore why major online companies are taking part in this system, how Tesla’s Semi vehicles fit in, and what this could mean for decarbonizing freight transport in the United States and even beyond.
Why Freight Is the Next Big Climate Battleground
Heavy-duty freight trucks, especially long-haul Class 8 trucks, are a major source of carbon emissions. Traditional diesel trucks burn fossil fuels and produce large amounts of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and air pollutants. They accounted for about 25% of all transport-related CO2 emissions.
Road freight accounts for a sizeable share of transportation sector emissions worldwide. Recent studies show that decarbonizing road freight is tough. Electric options are few, charging stations are still growing, and initial costs are high.
Electric heavy trucks such as the Tesla Semi offer a zero-tailpipe emissions alternative. The Tesla Semi is a battery-electric Class 8 truck designed for freight hauling. It features a battery pack of around 850–900 kWh and an estimated range of about 500 miles (~800 km) per charge on a single route.
The truck uses three electric motors and can operate at around 1.7–2 kWh per mile, making it competitive with diesel trucks over long distances. Planned volume production is expected to begin in 2026.

Using electric trucks like the Semi can cut carbon emissions from freight transport. They may also lower operating costs in the long run. Electricity can cost less per mile than diesel fuel. Also, electric drivetrains have fewer moving mechanical parts, which can cut maintenance costs.
However, electric freight truck adoption faces barriers. Electric heavy trucks are still new, and less than 1% of new heavy-duty trucks in the U.S. are electric. The charging infrastructure for heavy trucks is limited. Also, electric vehicles cost more than regular diesel ones.
What Is Book and Claim? Decarbonizing Freight Without Owning a Truck
The pilot program with Amazon, eBay, and Etsy uses a book-and-claim system. A book-and-claim system divides the environmental benefits of a low-emission product from its physical delivery. It lets companies support decarbonization, even if they can’t use low-emission vehicles directly.
In this case, the environmental attribute certificates represent the emissions savings from operating electric trucks instead of diesel trucks. Participating companies purchase these EACs. They then “retire” them, meaning no one can use the certificate again. This reduction counts toward their climate goals or Scope 3 emissions targets.
This approach is similar to how renewable energy certificates work for electricity. A company can buy certificates for renewable energy generation. This is true even if the actual electricity it uses comes from the grid. The certificates allow buyers to claim the environmental benefits.
Book-and-claim can help scale decarbonization efforts by aggregating demand from many buyers. This pooled demand helps both truck makers and service providers. They have a better reason to invest in electric fleets and charging stations, even if single buyers can’t use trucks on their own routes.
Experts say a clear book-and-claim system with strict rules can help decarbonize transportation. It ensures that emissions savings aren’t double-counted.
How the Pilot Program Works: Miles, Megawatts, and CO₂ Savings
The pilot program is run by the Center for Green Market Activation. This nonprofit aims to speed up climate solutions in supply chains. Under the program:
- Roughly 40 all-electric trucks are expected to operate on the Dallas-Houston freight route.
- The trucks will collectively travel up to 7 million miles per year.
- The trucks save about 60,000 metric tonnes of CO₂ equivalent compared to diesel fleets. This is over the multi-year contracts with buyers.
Amazon, eBay, and Etsy have joined the initiative by purchasing EACs. They will retire the certificates to support their own climate goals and reduce their reported Scope 3 logistics emissions.
All charging for the electric trucks is backed by renewable energy certificates. This means the electricity for powering the truck comes from clean energy, which reduces the carbon footprint of truck operation.
Groups in similar schemes often use book-and-claim. This helps decarbonize sectors with few low-emission options. For instance, sustainable aviation fuel certificates gather demand from airlines and corporate buyers. This helps scale the use of clean fuel.
Why Big Brands Are Buying Clean Freight
Big firms more often set climate goals for their whole value chain, which includes transport emissions. Many emissions are Scope 3. This includes indirect emissions from things like freight transport, business travel, and product use.
Reducing Scope 3 emissions is hard. Companies usually don’t control the sources that create these emissions directly.
Book-and-claim allows companies to access low-emission transport options even if they can’t run them. When companies pool demand, they send a stronger message to manufacturers and carriers. It shows there’s a real market need for clean freight solutions.
Electric trucks, like the Tesla Semi, draw attention because they provide a cleaner option than diesel trucks. They also keep the same freight capacity and range.
Moreover, companies aiming for net-zero and science-based targets are growing. So, the demand for low-emission freight services is likely to increase.
In addition, broader sales of electric heavy vehicles, not just Tesla’s Semi, are rising globally. In China alone, for example, registrations for hybrid and electric trucks reached over 231,000 units in 2025. This was a large increase from the previous year. This trend reflects growing production and adoption of electric freight vehicles worldwide.
A Blueprint for Scaling Zero-Emission Freight
The new pilot connects Amazon, eBay, Etsy, and Tesla Semi trucks, offering an innovative way to reduce carbon in freight transport. Electric heavy-duty trucks, like the Tesla Semi, are nearing mass production, while global sales of electric freight trucks are also rising. Thus, solutions that mix corporate demand, smart accounting, and clean tech could help cut transportation emissions.
This pilot could provide a model for how large buyers and logistics providers work together to accelerate the shift to low-carbon freight systems.
The post Amazon, eBay & Etsy Back Tesla Semis: A New Playbook for Zero-Emission Freight appeared first on Carbon Credits.
Carbon Footprint
The real cost of 1 tonne of CO2: Translating carbon into hectares
Every business carbon footprint report ends with a number, the amount of carbon emissions produced by the business, less the amount of carbon reduced and offset, given in tonnes of CO₂. Many of the people who sign off on that number, including those who paid for it, cannot picture what it represents on the ground. A tonne is a unit of mass. CO₂ is invisible. The link between the amount offset in the report and a real piece of restored forest somewhere in the world is almost never indicated.
![]()
Carbon Footprint
Finding Nature Based Solutions in Your Supply Chain
Carbon Footprint
How Climate Change Is Raising the Cost of Living
Americans are paying more for insurance, electricity, taxes, and home repairs every year. What many people may not realize is that climate change is already one of the drivers behind those rising costs.
For many households, climate change is no longer just an environmental issue. It is becoming a cost-of-living issue. While climate impacts like melting glaciers and shrinking polar ice can feel distant from everyday life, the financial effects are already showing up in monthly budgets across the country.
Today, a larger share of household income is consumed by fixed costs such as housing, insurance, utilities, and healthcare. (3) Climate change and climate inaction are adding pressure to many of those expenses through higher disaster recovery costs, rising energy demand, infrastructure repairs, and increased insurance risk.
The goal of this article is to help connect climate change to the everyday financial realities people already experience. Regardless of where someone stands on climate policy, it is important to recognize that climate change is already increasing costs for households, businesses, and taxpayers across the United States.
More conservative estimates indicate that the average household has experienced an increase of about $400 per year from observed climate change, while less conservative estimates suggest an increase of $900.(1) Those in more disaster-prone regions of the country face disproportionate costs, with some households experiencing climate-related costs averaging $1,300 per year.(1) Another study found that climate adaptation costs driven by climate change have already consumed over 3% of personal income in the U.S. since 2015.(9) By the end of the century, housing units could spend an additional $5,600 on adaptation costs.(1)
Whether we realize it or not, Americans are already paying for climate change through higher insurance premiums, energy costs, taxes, and infrastructure repairs. These growing expenses are often referred to as climate adaptation costs.
Without meaningful climate action, these costs are expected to continue rising. Choosing not to invest in climate action is also choosing to spend more on climate adaptation.
Here are a few ways climate change is already increasing the cost of living:
- Higher insurance costs from more frequent and severe storms
- Higher energy use during longer and hotter summers
- Higher electricity rates tied to storm recovery and grid upgrades
- Higher government spending and taxpayer-funded disaster recovery costs
The real debate is not whether climate change costs money. Americans are already paying for it. The question is where we want those costs to go. Should we invest more in climate action to help reduce future climate adaptation costs, or continue paying growing recovery and adaptation expenses in everyday life?
How Climate Change Is Increasing Insurance Costs
There is one industry that closely tracks the financial impact of natural disasters: insurance. Insurance companies are focused on assessing risk, estimating damages, and collecting enough revenue to cover losses and remain financially stable.
Comparing the 20-year periods 1980–1999 and 2000–2019, climate-related disasters increased 83% globally from 3,656 events to 6,681 events. The average time between billion-dollar disasters dropped from 82 days during the 1980s to 16 days during the last 10 years, and in 2025 the average time between disasters fell to just 10 days. (6)
According to the reinsurance firm Munich Re, total economic losses from natural disasters in 2024 exceeded $320 billion globally, nearly 40% higher than the decade-long annual average. Average annual inflation-adjusted costs more than quadrupled from $22.6 billion per year in the 1980s to $102 billion per year in the 2010s. Costs increased further to an average of $153.2 billion annually during 2020–2024, representing another 50% increase over the 2010s. (6)
In the United States, billion-dollar weather and climate disasters have also increased significantly. The average number of billion-dollar disasters per year has grown from roughly three annually during the 1980s to 19 annually over the last decade. In 2023 and 2024, the U.S. recorded 28 and 27 billion-dollar disasters respectively, both setting new records. (6)
The growing impact of climate change is one reason insurance costs continue to rise. “There are two things that drive insurance loss costs, which is the frequency of events and how much they cost,” said Robert Passmore, assistant vice president of personal lines at the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America. “So, as these events become more frequent, that’s definitely going to have an impact.” (8)
After adjusting for inflation, insurance costs have steadily increased over time. From 2000 to 2020, insurance costs consistently grew faster than the Consumer Price Index due to rising rebuilding costs and weather-related losses.(3) Between 2020 and 2023 alone, the average home insurance premium increased from $75 to $360 due to climate change impacts, with disaster-prone regions experiencing especially steep increases.(1) Since 2015, homeowners in some regions affected by more extreme weather have seen home insurance costs increased by nearly 57%.(1) Some insurers have also limited or stopped offering coverage in high-risk areas.(7)
For many families, rising insurance costs are no longer occasional financial burdens. They are becoming recurring monthly expenses tied directly to growing climate risk.
How Rising Temperatures Increase Household Energy Costs

The financial impacts of climate change extend beyond insurance. Rising temperatures are also changing how much energy Americans use and how utilities plan for future electricity demand.
Between 1950 and 2010, per capita electricity use increased 10-fold, though usage has flattened or slightly declined since 2012 due to more efficient appliances and LED lighting. (3) A significant share of increased energy demand comes from cooling needs associated with higher temperatures.
Over the last 20 years, the United States has experienced increasing Cooling Degree Days (CDD) and decreasing Heating Degree Days (HDD). Nearly all counties have become warmer over the past three decades, with some areas experiencing several hundred additional cooling degree days, equivalent to roughly one additional degree of warmth on most days. (1) This trend reflects a warming climate where air conditioning demand is increasing while heating demand generally declines. (4)
As temperatures continue rising, households are expected to spend more on cooling than they save on heating. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) projects that by 2050, national Heating Degree Days will be 11% lower while Cooling Degree Days will be 28% higher than 2021 levels. Cooling demand is projected to rise 2.5 times faster than heating demand declines. (5)
These projections come from energy and infrastructure experts planning for future electricity demand and grid capacity needs. Utilities and grid operators are already preparing for higher peak summer electricity loads caused by rising temperatures. (5)
Longer and hotter summers also affect how homes and buildings are designed. Buildings constructed for past climate conditions may require upgrades such as larger air conditioning systems, stronger insulation, and improved ventilation to remain comfortable and energy efficient in the future. (10)
For many households, this means higher monthly utility bills and potentially higher long-term home improvement costs as temperatures continue to rise.
How Climate Change Affects Electricity Rates
On an inflation-adjusted basis, average U.S. residential electricity rates are slightly lower today than they were 50 years ago. (2) However, climate-related damage to utility infrastructure is creating new upward pressure on electricity costs.
Electric utilities rely heavily on above-ground poles, wires, transformers, and substations that can be damaged by hurricanes, storms, floods, and wildfires. Repairing and upgrading this infrastructure often requires substantial investment.
As a result, utilities are increasing electricity rates in response to wildfire and hurricane events to fund infrastructure repairs and future mitigation efforts. (1) The average cumulative increase in per-household electricity expenditures due to climate-related price changes is approximately $30. (1)
While this increase may appear modest today, utility costs are expected to rise further as climate-related infrastructure damage becomes more frequent and severe.
How Climate Disasters Increase Government Spending and Taxes
Extreme weather events also damage public infrastructure, including roads, schools, bridges, airports, water systems, and emergency services infrastructure. Recovery and rebuilding costs are often funded through taxpayer dollars at the federal, state, and local levels.
The average annual government cost tied to climate-related disaster recovery is estimated at nearly $142 per household. (1) States that frequently experience hurricanes, wildfires, tornadoes, or flooding can face even higher public recovery costs.
These expenses affect taxpayers whether they personally experience a disaster or not. Climate-related recovery spending can increase pressure on public budgets, emergency management systems, and infrastructure funding nationwide.
Reducing Climate Costs Through Climate Action
While this article focuses on the growing financial costs associated with climate change, the issue is not only about money for many people. It is also about recognizing our environmental impact and taking responsibility for reducing it in order to help preserve a healthy planet for future generations.
While individuals alone cannot solve climate change, collective action can help reduce future climate adaptation costs over time.
For those interested in taking action, there are three important steps:
- Estimate your carbon footprint to better understand the emissions connected to your lifestyle and activities.
- Create a plan to gradually reduce emissions through energy efficiency, cleaner technologies, and more sustainable choices.
- Address remaining emissions by supporting verified carbon reduction projects through carbon credits.
Carbon credits are one of the most cost-effective tools available for climate action because they help fund projects that generate verified emission reductions at scale. Supporting global emission reduction efforts can help reduce the long-term impacts and costs associated with climate change.
Visit Terrapass to learn more about carbon footprints, carbon credits, and climate action solutions.
The post How Climate Change Is Raising the Cost of Living appeared first on Terrapass.
-
Climate Change10 months ago
Guest post: Why China is still building new coal – and when it might stop
-
Greenhouse Gases10 months ago
Guest post: Why China is still building new coal – and when it might stop
-
Greenhouse Gases2 years ago嘉宾来稿:满足中国增长的用电需求 光伏加储能“比新建煤电更实惠”
-
Climate Change2 years ago嘉宾来稿:满足中国增长的用电需求 光伏加储能“比新建煤电更实惠”
-
Climate Change2 years ago
Bill Discounting Climate Change in Florida’s Energy Policy Awaits DeSantis’ Approval
-
Renewable Energy7 months agoSending Progressive Philanthropist George Soros to Prison?
-
Carbon Footprint2 years agoUS SEC’s Climate Disclosure Rules Spur Renewed Interest in Carbon Credits
-
Greenhouse Gases11 months ago
嘉宾来稿:探究火山喷发如何影响气候预测



