What is the carbon footprint of a tweet?

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I appreciate your point that EVERY action we take contributes to our carbon footprint, even typing this response from my low-energy use laptop. When I was Teaching Assistant for an Environmental Systems course, we had the students use several carbon calculators as an early exercise and compare and contrast the information they learned about their own habits and describe their perception of the calculator’s precision. Many students were surprised to learn the impacts from various activities and learned a lot about the degree of impact airplane travel and eating meat frequently had on their carbon footprint. Learning to balance activities that give us joy with reducing carbon begins with education based on data. Giving up tweeting with the intention to save the planet while eating steak, bacon, and other high-energy, high-water use habits will not help. Unlike the hole in the ozone layer, the solution to climate change is a complex one and requires action from many sides. I am happy to be in design, a community full of action and optimism while pursing deep thinking and research on how our planet can survive after the end of nature.

Alison Nash, April 9, 2014

Thanks Ian for the very thoughtful and thought-provoking article. It seems too often we wring our hands about our carbon footprint (wheter individual or collective) or other environmental impacts without questioning or considering our consumption habits or, perhaps more importantly – and as implied by your piece – the underlying culture of consumption in which we live. It’s a daunting challenge. I, too, don’t want to live in a cave and eat berries. And as professionals in the AEC industry, the fundamentally most sustainable thing we can do is simply not build anything. Not entirely palatable, either. So it really does come down to consumption and our attitudes toward it. It is no accident that the old slogan from the 1990s started with “reduce” and “reuse” before adding “recycle,” as even recycling consumes energy. What I find really interesting about your article is the invisible nature of the consumption of technology, given the ubiquity of the underlying infrastructure … insidious! So thank you for increasing our awareness.

Mark Careaga, April 10, 2014

I think this matters more today than ever before and very few consider their digital footprint and the impact on the environment.

David Pierce, September 24, 2019

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