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Yvon Chouinard
Founder of Patagonia and co-founder of 1% for the Planet
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
60/100
Raw Score
48/85
Confidence
68%
Evidence
Good
About
Yvon Chouinard built Patagonia around environmental restraint and later transferred the company so its excess profits would keep funding climate and conservation work.
The public record is strongest on disciplined environmental giving, willingness to forgo personal upside, and steady advocacy over decades. The main cautions are thin evidence on explicit belief and worship, plus criticism that his 2022 ownership transfer preserved family control while avoiding a large tax bill.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Chouinard scores best where repeated outward sacrifice, institutional generosity, and steadiness under pressure are visible. The record is much weaker on explicit God-centered belief and worship, which keeps the overall profile positive but clearly incomplete.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Contribution to Others
Personal Discipline
Reliability
Stability Under Pressure
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Founded Patagonia as a business shaped by climbing and conservation values
Chouinard turned his climbing-gear work into Patagonia and built the company around durable products, repair, and lower-impact outdoor use rather than disposable consumption.
→ Created the institution through which most of his later environmental commitments and public influence would operate.
highCommitted Patagonia to give 1% of sales to environmental protection
Patagonia states that since 1985 it has pledged 1% of sales to preserve and restore the natural environment, turning environmental giving into a standing business obligation rather than occasional charity.
→ Established a long-running giving discipline that later scaled into wider institutional philanthropy.
highCo-founded 1% for the Planet to widen environmental giving beyond one company
Chouinard and Craig Mathews launched 1% for the Planet to push other businesses to commit a fixed share of sales to environmental groups.
→ Moved his giving model from one firm to a broader business coalition.
highTransferred Patagonia ownership to a trust and nonprofit aimed at protecting the planet
Chouinard announced that the company's voting stock would sit in the Patagonia Purpose Trust and its nonvoting stock in Holdfast Collective so excess profits could keep funding climate and conservation work.
→ Converted most of the family's economic ownership into a structure built to preserve mission and route future profits outward.
highFaced criticism that the Patagonia transfer kept family control and avoided a major tax bill
Bloomberg reported that the new ownership structure allowed the family to retain significant control while sidestepping what could have been a very large tax hit, complicating the generosity narrative.
→ The criticism did not erase the outward commitment, but it remains a meaningful integrity caution around power and tax structure.
mediumBacked Patagonia's first post-transfer impact reporting while admitting continuing harm and unfinished work
Patagonia's 2025 impact report carried a note from Chouinard emphasizing that the company had not solved its environmental footprint and still had hard tradeoffs to confront.
→ Added credibility to the mission by pairing advocacy with some public self-critique rather than only celebratory branding.
mediumPublicly pressed Iceland to restrict open-net salmon farming despite industry pressure
In a 2026 public comment, Chouinard again used his platform to argue against environmentally damaging aquaculture, showing that his activism continued well after handing off day-to-day executive control.
→ Reinforced a long pattern of environmental advocacy that persists even in late career.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
2022 Patagonia transfer scrutiny
2022His decision to give away Patagonia drew praise but also scrutiny over taxes and retained family control.
Response: He still moved forward with a legally durable structure that routed future profits to environmental causes.
mixed_positive2025 impact-report honesty
2025After the headline philanthropy move, Patagonia still faced scrutiny over the gap between mission and real-world footprint.
Response: The public reporting acknowledged ongoing harm and unfinished work instead of claiming full moral success.
positive2026 aquaculture advocacy
2026Environmental campaigning against salmon-farming interests remained politically contested.
Response: He used his reputation publicly and directly to press for tighter rules rather than withdrawing into retirement.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Faced the contradiction of doing good through a profitable company that still causes harm.
testedcurrent stage
Late-life activism still centers on using institutional power for environmental protection.
stableearly years
Craft-based outdoor work became a moral suspicion of waste and overconsumption.
forminggrowth years
Turned Patagonia into a platform for standing environmental commitments.
improvingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Turns values into durable rules rather than one-off gifts.
- • Keeps using late-life status to support environmental fights with little obvious personal upside.
- • Pairs product success with repair, conservation, and anti-consumerist messaging.
Concerns
- • Direct evidence of religious life is sparse.
- • The most celebrated act of generosity also carried control and tax advantages.
- • Public evidence is stronger on planet-scale causes than on intimate duties like family obligations.
Evidence Quality
7
Strong
3
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: good
This profile measures observable public behavior and evidence patterns, not hidden intention, private spirituality, or salvation.