The unique body movements and the soul stirring sensations that those movements inspire are what keeps us strapping into a snowboard to dance with gravity down the mountain.
Because there are a lot of ways to get from point A to point B on snow. Skis, a splitboard, or just your own two feet can get you where you want to go, but a snowboard lets you trace a route unlike any other form of mountain transport. What defines snowboarding, and what makes us love it so much, is this totally one-of-a-kind feeling of sliding sideways across the frozen earth.
In 2020 we completed a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) that calculated the approximate carbon footprint of every snowboard and splitboard model we sell. This in-depth sustainability analysis covered the complete life cycle of a Jones board, including every stage of its production and distribution. After exploring how materials affect a snowboard’s carbon footprint, the next step in the LCA analysis was to examine the environmental impact of shipping materials and finished products. What we found was an exact parallel to the concept of why we snowboard.
Shipping raw materials to the factory, and then shipping finished boards to our distributors, dealers and customers are unavoidable aspects of our production. And just like snowboarding, it is the style of how we move these products that means everything in terms of sustainability.