Digital Sustainability Hub
Every email sent, video watched, and website loaded uses a fraction of electrical energy. While individual actions seem tiny, billions of connected devices and data centers combine to form our global digital carbon footprint.
When we save files to the cloud, they are actually stored on physical servers in massive data centers. These facilities run 24/7 and consume enormous amounts of electricity.
You can reduce your digital carbon footprint by keeping devices longer, streaming efficiently, closing unused browser tabs, and turning off video during meetings when appropriate.
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TikTok's footprint comes from video delivery, device energy use, and the time people spend scrolling. This page gives a simple way to understand how short-form video can add up over time.
Zoom meetings use energy for video delivery, networking, and the devices involved in every call. This page explains how work-related digital habits contribute to a broader digital carbon footprint.
Instagram's footprint comes from media delivery, mobile device power use, and the energy needed to store and serve content at global scale. This page puts that impact into everyday terms.
Your browser is open anyway. Make it work for the earth.
Work meetings add up. Offset your 9-to-5.
Doomscrolling? Make it green planting.
Meeting adjourned. Trees planted.
Snaps disappear. CO2 stays. Offset it.
Karma points for the planet.