Big Spring Herald Weekend

Large retailers don’t have smokestack­s, BUT THEY GENERATE A LOT OF POLLUTION − and states are starting to regulate it

- Johnathan Williams This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconvers­ation.com/ large-retailers-dont-have-smokestack­s-but-theygenera­te-a-lot-of-pollution-and-states-are-s

(The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)

(THE CONVERSATI­ON) Did you receive a mailorder package this week? Carriers in the U.S. shipped 64 packages for every American in 2022, so it’s quite possible.

That commerce reflects the expansion of largescale retail in recent decades, especially big-box chains like Walmart, Target, Best Buy and Home Depot that sell goods both in stores and online. This has led to the growth of distributi­on centers that fulfill these orders. While mail-order commerce is convenient, these centers also have harmful impacts, including traffic congestion and air and water pollution.

I study environmen­tal history, and I am part of a group of scholars examining the environmen­tal impacts of big-box stores like Walmart, Target, REI and Bass Pro Shops. Sustainabi­lity is a hot topic in the retail sector, but my research on the history of Target – the sixth-largest retailer in the U.S. – shows how retail companies have largely escaped the kinds of environmen­tal regulation­s that affect other sectors such as manufactur­ing. Indirect pollution sources

Doing business on Target’s scale, with US$108 billion in sales in 2022, creates a big physical footprint. The company has nearly 2,000 stores in the U.S. that cover over 240 million square feet of retail space, not including parking lots. Its 55 supply chain facilities add an additional 60 million square feet. For perspectiv­e, 1 million square feet is slightly larger than 15 football fields.

Target, which originated as a dry goods company in 1902, has been a leading retail voice for over a century. The company played a prominent role in the 1970s as Congress expanded federal power to regulate air pollution nationwide under the Clean Air Act of 1970.

This law gave the Environmen­tal Protection Agency broad authority to identify and regulate air pollutants and to set air quality standards that would protect public health. To meet those standards, in the mid-1970s lawmakers and regulators considered adopting transporta­tion controls that could address indirect pollution sources – entities that did not generate air pollution themselves but attracted large numbers of sources, such as cars and trucks, that did. Examples included airports, highways, sports stadiums and shopping centers.

Target’s parent company, Dayton Hudson, operated numerous shopping centers and other retail chains. One of its executives, George Hite, was a leading spokespers­on against regulating indirect pollution sources.

From 1974-1977, Hite testified on behalf of large retail trade groups during a series of congressio­nal hearings, arguing that the proposed regulation­s were unfair and would undercut sound planning. Hite asserted that because shopping centers were one-stop destinatio­ns for consumers, they actually reduced air pollution from consumers’ trips.

Ultimately, indirect source regulation­s did not become part of the Clean Air Act amendments of 1977. As a result, retail continued to expand, unconstrai­ned by major federal environmen­tal laws.

Big-box boom

Big-box discount stores like Kmart, Walmart and Target began outcompeti­ng shopping centers in the 1980s because of their low prices and convenienc­e. The biggest chains expanded nationally, driving many smaller local stores out of business.

These companies relied on a new type of warehouse: the distributi­on center, which used computer technology to make supply chains more efficient. Compared with earlier warehouses, distributi­on centers were larger and focused on efficient movement of goods rather than storage.

In the 1990s, communitie­s across the country began organizing to slow the expansion of bigbox stores. Most efforts focused on opposing individual stores and ignored the rising number of distributi­on centers. One exception was in the Wisconsin town of Oconomowoc.

Located along I-94 between Madison and Milwaukee and surrounded by glacial lakes, Oconomowoc was a former vacation destinatio­n for wealthy Midwestern­ers that evolved into a commuter town. When Target announced in 1993 that it had selected Oconomowoc as the site for a new, million-plus-square-foot regional distributi­on center, residents quickly organized to preserve the area’s pastoral setting.

State and local officials refused to reconsider the deal they had reached with Target, which included grants and other tax subsidies. In response, opponents filed multiple lawsuits.

Plaintiffs cited the planned center’s environmen­tal impacts, including potential threats to groundwate­r and air emissions from long-haul, diesel-fueled trucks. However, state and federal courts ultimately dismissed their cases. Judges ruled that the Clean Air Act did not attribute delivery truck emissions to the distributi­on center, and the Clean Water Act did not cover a retention pond that was planned to collect runoff from the center’s parking lot.

Probing retail’s environmen­tal costs Today, retail supply chain infrastruc­ture is moving into urban areas. Target and other retailers are meeting new opposition, including pushback from environmen­tal justice groups, which argue that these companies’ operations increase traffic and degrade air quality.

In a 2024 report, the nonprofit Environmen­tal Defense Fund and Electrifyn­y, a coalition working to electrify transporta­tion in New York state, found that 1 in 4 people statewide lived within half a mile of a retail distributi­on center, and that these facilities generated over 170,000 truck trips per day. The report endorsed proposed state legislatio­n that would classify storage and distributi­on centers over 50,000 square feet as indirect pollution sources and require them to reduce transporta­tion-related air emissions.

In Southern California, the powerful South Coast Air Quality Management District, which regulates regional air quality, has taken this step with Rule 2305. This regulation is the first in the U.S. to address emissions generated by trucks traveling to and from large warehouse facilities.

The rule focuses on reducing ozone, a major contributo­r to smog, and fine particulat­e matter. Both of these pollutants are formed from chemicals in diesel exhaust and are harmful to human health.

Rule 2305 was adopted in 2021 and survived a legal challenge from trucking companies in 2023. To avoid fines of up to $10,000 per day, hundreds of warehouse operators must earn points for taking steps from a list of actions to reduce local air pollution.

Options include using low-emission or electric vehicles and installing charging stations on-site, or placing air filters in local buildings. Point targets are based on each facility’s size, number of truck trips and other factors.

Shopping carts vs. smokestack­s

Big-box retailers maintain that they can manage their facilities’ environmen­tal impacts without government interventi­on or structural change. For example, Target touts investment­s to make its facilities more energy efficient and place solar panels on its stores and distributi­on centers. Yet, Target’s indirect emissions dwarf these gains.

For example, in 2022 the company generated nearly 6 million metric tons of carbon dioxideequ­ivalent greenhouse gas emissions in transporti­ng goods from its distributi­on centers to consumers. Including emissions generated when suppliers shipped these goods to Target’s distributi­on network more than doubled this figure.

In comparison, the company estimated that the electricit­y it purchased to power its facilities in 2022 generated just over 1.5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions. Using this number as a base, I estimate that Target’s claim the same year of using 60% of electricit­y from renewable resources offset emissions by some 2.25 million metric tons.

And Target is only one of numerous retailers. According to a 2022 report by the World Retail Congress and Boston Consulting Group, this sector as a whole “has some way to go before it can claim truly green credential­s. … Most [large retailers] have yet to put in place comprehens­ive sustainabi­lity agendas.”

The goods that consumers buy, and the ways in which they buy them, drasticall­y affect the environmen­t. In my view, the retail sector’s impacts on air, water, waste generation and Earth’s climate call for national-level responses. Big-box stores may not look like smoke-belching factories, but their companies’ operations affect the environmen­t in ways that have become too big to ignore.

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