How Klarna is making shopping more sustainable for millions

Klarna credit cards

“The challenge now for any business trying to become more sustainable is transitioning to a low-carbon way of creating value. It’s a hard challenge, but not one that’s going to stop us.”

Shulin Chang, Klarna Sustainability Team, Analytics Lead

Most know Klarna as a leader in enabling Buy Now, Pay Later shopping experiences, which allow consumers to easily split or delay payments for larger purchases to make them more budget-friendly. But underpinning this mission to bring consumers shopping flexibility is another mission: to build a business that supports a healthy planet.

With 147M consumers and 400K merchants using their platform, Klarna has a massive surface area for action, and everyone—from front-line employees to senior leadership—is united around making shopping a less carbon-intensive activity for all.

Setting a foundation for action

Klarna took the right first step and started with measurement—making sure they understood exactly how much carbon was lurking in their operations and supply chain.

A few of the early wins from that effort:

But important as first steps are, Klarna then decided on a far more important action—that has both redefined how they make everyday decisions and allowed them to fund high-impact climate work elsewhere: they introduced an internal carbon tax.

Putting a price on their own emissions

As the world has moved slowly towards directly taxing carbon, some forward-thinking companies have simply assigned a tax on themselves.

When Klarna reviews what they spend money on now, they use Watershed to calculate the net emissions of each business activity, then they set aside $100 for every tonne of emissions from their facilities, operations, purchased electricity, and travel—or $10 per tonne for activities happening in their supply chain (“Scope 3” emissions).

Gross emissions by GHG Scope - desktop
Gross emissions by GHG Scope - mobile

It’s a powerful mechanism. Where pushing for low-carbon alternatives for anything from office fittings to marketing materials was once a nice idea, with an internal carbon tax it became a financial necessity. Suddenly everyday business decisions were now aligned with the goal of radically reducing emissions—which not only benefits the planet, but passes on a smaller carbon footprint to every brand and consumer that shops with Klarna.

And what does Klarna do with these taxes? These taxes are moved to the Climate Transformation Fund, where the money gets invested in both the present (climate advocacy) and the future (frontier carbon removal). Climate advocacy covers a range of causes including forest protection, human rights, and clean air. As for carbon removal, Klarna purchases credits from innovative carbon removal companies using, for example, biochar or enhanced weathering to permanently remove CO2 from the atmosphere.

Seeing (and managing) the whole picture

"Having a detailed breakdown of our emissions and being able to pinpoint where the largest sources are has helped: we now know what we need to do and who we need to work with."

As they got deep into their footprint data, Klarna was surprised to find an unexpected activity dominating it: marketing spend. Every ad agency has their own offices, and every ad platform its own emissions. And it all adds up!

This is the great challenge facing companies today: their own immediate emissions are only a small piece of the puzzle. They also have to positively influence the carbon intensity of all the partners and suppliers whose inputs go into their products—ensuring a lower total footprint.

But this is exactly the type of work required to bend a company’s carbon graph, and it's where Watershed can help. Klarna now uses Watershed to gather emissions data on their largest vendors and partners, which helps them understand which levers to pull to drive real impact.

If we can help enable this kind of insight for your company, please get in touch.

Raising the bar

In 2021, Klarna launched its Give One Initiative: a pledge to dedicate 1% of all newly raised funds to planet health action. As of late 2021, Klarna has committed $16.5M to this program, which funds its carbon reduction program and carbon removal initiatives. They’re also pioneering in allowing consumers to donate to climate-positive projects through the Climate Transformation Fund as part of their shopping experience

Klarna is now committed to cutting their carbon intensity in half by 2030, and to operating at net zero emissions by no later than 2040.

Stay up to date

Get the latest from Watershed, from policy updates to in-depth climate guides.

Guides

an image of the CSRD experts who spoke at Watershed's webinar

Tactical advice on the CSRD

Photo of UK flag on the left and TPT logo on the right

TPT: Everything you need to know about the UK Transition Plan Taskforce

Illustration of coins in a field

SEC ESG fund rules: Everything you need to know

Customer stories

coyuchi product

How Coyuchi gets product-level carbon insights from Watershed

houses next to solar panels

How Aon automated its carbon footprint measurement

kroll and watershed and cdp logos

Kroll on using Watershed to save time reporting to CDP

Watershed HQ

Sylvie Goulard, a new member of Watershed's Policy Advisory Board

Welcoming Sylvie Goulard to our Policy Advisory Board

Climate curve with text "Series C"

$100M for climate

2023 with a world for the 0

Watershed's 2023 year in review

SEC

Illustration of coins in a field

SEC ESG fund rules: Everything you need to know

the California capitol where SB253 and SB261 were passed

California SB 253 and SB 261: a guide for companies

Welcoming Mary Schapiro to the Watershed Policy Advisory Board

Welcoming Mary Schapiro to our Policy Advisory Board

Legal

watershed and latham and watkins law firm logos next to an image of the SEC

How to prepare for mandatory climate disclosure - advice from Betty M. Huber of Latham & Watkins

ropes and grey logo with the California flag, watershed logo and text: Guide

Michael Littenberg of Ropes & Gray on California’s SB 253 and 261

EU Flag plus Covington logo

What is the EU's Green Claims Directive? Full Guide with Covington experts