Greenpeace along with its 500,000 supporters on Facebook reminds Facebook to stop using coal to power its Data center, with coal being the largest source of global warming pollution.
Facebook got a lot of support from locals when it decided to open a data center in Prineville, Oregon but also came under criticism from environmentalist for its plan construct coal-powered data center. A campaign to get Facebook to “Unfriend Coal” started soon after Facebook announced its plan.
Shortly after beginning works on the data center, Facebook made another announcement to the dismay of environment activist about doubling the size of its data center at Oregon.
The Facebook campaign to “unfriend coal” has grown to half-a-million supporters this week.
Greenpeace regularly uses Facebook to engage its supporters and their friends to hold corporations accountable for their environmental impact,” wrote Greenpeace International Executive Director Kumi Naidoo in an open letter to the founder and chief executive of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg. “Facebook is uniquely positioned to be a truly visible and influential leader to drive the deployment of clean energy.”
Naidoo also urged Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to “exercise bold and immediate leadership in addressing climate change” for the interest of the Facebook, its users, and our planet.
Though it is unlikely for Facebook to take immediate decision or action to “unfriend coal” at its data center, it is taking up the issue of energy conservation into consideration, according to their blog post.
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