According to Allbirds, there are four pillars to designing a good shoe: “What it looks like, the utility and the cost… and carbon,” Tim Brown, co-founder and co-CEO, says. The final consideration stems from internal discussions about how net-zero, Allbirds’s ultimate goal, would be achieved. Its designers would collaborate with its sustainability experts to build a shoe that emits carbon but also captures it, evening its carbon emission at zero.
Now, the first shoe to fit the bill is (almost) here.
Allbirds’s First-Ever Net-Zero Sneaker, the Mo.oNSHOT
The Mo.oNSHOT is a high-top sneaker set to debut in June 2023. (For now, teasers suggest they’re high-tops, with sock-like uppers.)
“Creating a net zero carbon shoe that is commercially viable and scalable is the culmination of our entire back-catalog of work,” Brown says. “M0.0NSHOT isn’t a silver bullet for the climate crisis — it’s a proof-point that, when we take sustainability seriously, and are laser-focused on carbon reduction, we can make incredible breakthroughs.”

Allbirds uses different steps of the production process to nullify its footprint. It’s switching to carbon-negative regenerative uppers, which are made from merino wool grown on Lake Hawea Station in New Zealand. It’s mainlining its carbon-negative sugarcane-based foam midsoles, which have been implemented by brands like Timberland. It’s introducing carbon-negative bioplastic eyelets developed by Mango Materials. It’s also opting for more environmentally friendly packaging and cleaner delivery systems.