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Carbon Footprint of Safari

IdleForest models one hour of Safari use at about 20g of CO2.

Safari's footprint depends less on the browser brand than on open tabs, media-heavy pages, extensions, and the device running the session.

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How this Safari estimate is built

IdleForest models Safari as active web browsing with a slightly lower footprint than heavy desktop browsing because many Safari sessions happen on energy-efficient Apple devices.

  • The 20gCO2e/hour estimate reflects active browsing rather than a single page load.
  • The yearly estimate uses 20gCO2e/hour x 3 hours/day x 365 / 1000 = 21.9kgCO2e/year.
  • Tree offset math rounds 21.9kgCO2e/year divided by 20kgCO2e per tree-year up to 2 trees.

Calculation proof

How the estimate is calculated

Annual footprint formula

20g CO2e/hour x 3h/day x 365 / 1000 = 21.9kg CO2e/year

Tree offset formula

ceil(21.9kg CO2e / 20 kg CO2e per tree-year) = 2 rounded up

Source basis: This estimate combines the app's modeled hourly footprint, usage assumption, methodology notes, and linked research sources. It is directional and should be read as a transparent consumer estimate, not a vendor emissions disclosure.

What drives this estimate most

  • Open tabs, video-heavy pages, and extensions can keep CPU and memory usage elevated.
  • Long browsing sessions compound modest hourly energy demand into a meaningful yearly total.
  • Device efficiency matters because the browser is only one part of the system load.

Assumptions and boundaries

  • The estimate assumes active browsing rather than a single page load snapshot.
  • It treats browser energy as a blend of app overhead, site complexity, and device behavior.
  • It is designed as a habit-level estimate rather than a measurement of one exact tab setup.

Uncertainty note: Browser emissions are especially sensitive to browsing habits, tab count, extensions, and the complexity of the pages being rendered.

Yearly Impact Comparison

IdleForest
Safari

*IdleForest offsets ~200kg CO2/year on average per user.

Ways to reduce this footprint

  • Close unused tabs and disable heavy extensions you no longer need.
  • Prefer lighter browsing sessions on battery-efficient devices when possible.
  • Reduce simultaneous media playback and script-heavy multitasking.

Estimate review

Who reviewed this estimate

Reviewed by: IdleForest Research Team

Role: Editorial Review

Organization: IdleForest

Last reviewed: May 10, 2026

These estimates are meant to help compare digital habits. They are directional, not exact reproductions of proprietary vendor accounting.

More questions about Safari's carbon footprint

Is Safari's footprint mostly from the browser?

No. The loaded websites, video playback, ads, scripts, device efficiency, and local electricity mix usually matter more than the browser name alone.

About IdleForest

IdleForest is a passive browser extension that plants trees while you browse, game, or stream. It uses your unused internet bandwidth to fund reforestation projects.

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No account required

Open source