Omitir y pasar al contenido principal
Gastos de envío gratis desde 100 €

Información de envío

Hacemos todo lo posible por procesar y enviar los pedidos en 1-2 días laborables (de lunes a viernes, excepto festivos). Te rogamos que, siempre que sea posible, elijas el envío estándar para reducir nuestro impacto ambiental. Si tienes alguna duda sobre tu pedido, puedes contactar con nuestro servicio de atención al cliente, que estará encantado de ayudarte.

Más información

Información de envío

Devoluciones

¿No sabes qué talla elegir? ¿No te decides entre varias chaquetas? Nuestro servicio de atención al cliente está aquí para ayudarte. No tenemos límite de tiempo para devoluciones y aceptamos productos de la temporada actual y de temporadas anteriores. Cuantos menos envíos innecesarios, mejor.

Cómo funcionan las devoluciones

Inicia tu devolución

Atención al cliente

Devoluciones

Garantía Blindada

Garantía Blindada
Garantizamos todo lo que fabricamos. Si no estás satisfecho con uno de nuestros productos al momento de recibirlo, o si uno de nuestros productos no cumple con tus expectativas, devuélvelo a la tienda donde lo compraste o a Patagonia para su reparación, reemplazo o reembolso.

Ver Garantía Blindada

Politics and Global Warming

 /  julio 17, 2007  /  Activismo, Planeta

There was a great interview on Democracy Now the other day with science journalist Chris Mooney, who has a new book called Storm World: Hurricanes, Politics and the Battle Over Global Warming. He looks at how the administration of George W. Bush has meddled with government scientists working on hurricane forecasting, global warming and other environmental issues to further political ends. It also looks at the involvement of conservative corporations and religious groups in blurring the global warming debate, comparing their concerted effort to influence public opinion to the historic efforts of the tobacco industry.

The interview also makes reference to the other side of the current political environmental movement – represented in great part by Al Gore and his recent Live Earthconcerts. In a speech at one of the concerts, which were held July 7 on seven continents, Al Gore outlines concretesteps the American public and the government should take to curbglobal CO2 emissions, including sign an international treaty to reduce emissions of developed countries by 90 percent in a generation.

Anyone who has followed Gore’s involvement in the environmentalmovement since his academy award-winning documentary An InconvenientTruth knows that his efforts to stop rising tempertures have also drawncriticism about his motives and authenticity. Reporters questioned Gore in the lead-up to his most recent event about the concert’scarbon footprint, the environmental record of some of the sponsors, as well as the extravagant lifestyles of some of the performances (check out NPR’s "Gore Brings Global Warming Crisis to  the Stage", Spiegel’s "Daimler Chrysler Kisses Green Goodbye" and BBC’s "Monsters beat Live Earth on US TV").

Few people on the planet can boast a flawless environmental track record when put to such intense public scrutiny. But Al Gore should serve as a cautionary tale for politicians and everyone looking to join the anti-global warming crusade. Those making the most noise about global warming should also carry the most evidence of positive change in their own lives.

[With thanks to Gronk for the Spiegel link]

Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Garantizamos todos los productos que fabricamos.

Ver Garantía Blindada
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Asumimos la responsabilidad de nuestro impacto.

Descubre nuestra contribución
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Apoyamos el activismo de base.

Visita Patagonia Action Works
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Mantenemos en marcha tu equipamiento.

Visita Worn Wear
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Destinamos nuestras ganancias al planeta.

Lee nuestro compromiso
Búsquedas populares