Rivian is set to lose a prominent sustainability and brand-building voice from its leadership ranks. Former Patagonia chief executive Rose Marcario is resigning from Rivian’s board of directors, according to a Friday afternoon stock exchange filing first reported by TechCrunch.
In the filing, Rivian said Marcario’s last day on the board will be January 1, 2026, and that she is leaving “to focus on other commitments.” Her departure reduces the board from eight members to seven at a moment when the electric-vehicle maker is preparing for what may be its most consequential product and manufacturing push since its 2021 public debut.
A board change as Rivian heads into a pivotal year
Marcario’s resignation lands on the eve of a major transition for Rivian. The company plans to begin selling its more affordable R2 SUV in the first half of 2026—an effort aimed at reaching a far broader customer base than its current premium lineup, the R1T pickup and R1S SUV.
While Rivian has built a strong brand identity around adventure, design, and sustainability, its next phase hinges on scale. The company has said it intends to produce hundreds of thousands of R2 vehicles per year, including output tied to a new factory planned in Georgia. The move toward higher volumes is critical in an industry where unit economics, manufacturing efficiency, and pricing power can determine whether a fast-growing automaker becomes consistently profitable.
At the same time, Rivian is looking to expand its driver-assistance and automated driving capabilities, a competitive arena increasingly defined by software iteration speed, sensor strategy, and the quality of real-world training data. The company recently detailed its roadmap at an event it called Autonomy & AI Day, signaling that software features will be a larger part of its value proposition as it moves downmarket.
Who Rose Marcario is—and why she mattered to Rivian
Rose Marcario joined Rivian’s board in January 2021, bringing a reputation forged during a 12-year run at Patagonia, where she served as an executive and later as CEO. Her tenure at Patagonia was closely associated with the outdoor brand’s emphasis on environmental advocacy, responsible supply chains, and values-forward corporate messaging.
That profile aligned neatly with the image Rivian has long tried to cultivate: an EV company that is not only selling vehicles, but also selling an ethos. In the years leading up to and following Rivian’s IPO, CEO RJ Scaringe frequently described his ambition for the company to become “the Patagonia of EVs,” framing the automaker as a mission-driven alternative within the transportation sector.
For a company navigating the tension between premium branding and the hard realities of scaling manufacturing, Marcario’s presence also served as a kind of signaling mechanism—an indicator to investors, customers, and partners that sustainability and corporate responsibility were intended to remain central as the company matured.
Marcario will remain involved through the Rivian Foundation
Although Marcario is leaving the corporate board, she will continue in a leadership role within Rivian’s philanthropic structure. The company said she will remain chair of the board of trustees overseeing the Rivian Foundation.
Marcario serves on the foundation’s trustee board alongside RJ Scaringe, chief sustainability officer Anisa Kamadoli Costa, and conservationist Ed M. Norton, according to the report. The foundation was formed shortly before Rivian’s 2021 IPO and was initially given 1% of the company’s equity—an unusual structure meant to make “the natural world” a “stakeholder” in the company’s success.
In practice, the foundation’s visibility has evolved alongside Rivian’s market trajectory. After the company’s stock fell from its post-IPO highs, the foundation remained relatively quiet for several years. It later announced its first $10 million in grants in 2024, and this year has publicized an additional $2.6 million in awards on its website.
What the resignation could mean for governance and strategy
Board composition can matter in subtle but meaningful ways, particularly for companies entering a high-stakes execution cycle. As Rivian approaches the R2 launch, it must balance product development, supply chain readiness, factory buildout timelines, and the capital discipline demanded by public markets. Board members often influence priorities through committee work, executive oversight, and the kinds of questions that get asked behind closed doors.
Marcario’s departure does not, by itself, signal a strategic reversal—especially given her continued role with the Rivian Foundation. Still, it removes a director closely associated with the company’s early narrative and sustainability positioning at a time when EV competition is intensifying and buyers are increasingly price-sensitive.
For Rivian, 2026 is shaping up as a year defined by delivery: delivering a lower-priced vehicle, delivering manufacturing scale, and delivering software upgrades that keep pace with rivals. The company has not announced a replacement director in the filing, and it did not provide additional details beyond stating Marcario is leaving to focus on other commitments.
With the clock ticking toward the R2’s debut, investors and industry watchers will be looking for signs that Rivian can preserve its brand identity while meeting the operational demands of mass-market production—an equation that will test the company far beyond the boardroom.

