Funding at the intersection of Climate and Tech

Funding at the intersection of Climate and TechWe are living in a climate crisis. The science is clear. We need to rapidly change to a more just and sustainable society. This includes investing in sustainable internet infrastructures, to this date the world’s largest coal-powered machine. Often considered separately, the environment and the internet share much in common; both are global in scope, linked to exercising key human rights, and require cooperation and coordination across the planet. From water rights disputes between data centres and local residents, to rampant greenwashing misinformation by fossil fuel companies, the ecological consequences of the internet are just one of the many complex problems at the intersection of climate justice and technology.

We are pleased to share research on the implications and intersections of climate justice for digital rights supported by Ford FoundationMozilla Foundation, and Ariadne. While the primary audience for the research is digital rights funders or adjacent technology funders, we believe the work can be useful for other funders and organisations given that the climate crisis and technology intersect with every other field and human rights topic. We come to this topic humbly, knowing that many practitioners have been thinking critically about these issues for a long time. We offer the following research as a starting place for digital rights funders who have felt unsure about how to begin untangling climate implications for their work.

The research is a bundle of eight different research pieces produced by four different organisations each with their own networks and perspectives. Below is the full list of all the research organised by the researcher or organisation that produced the work:

Context for the research

The idea behind the initial research commission was to provide a landscape of themes and topics where digital rights and climate issues are deeply intertwined so we could begin to:

  • build a shared surface area to develop a shared language and framing
  • provide a resource for education of digital rights funders related to foundational climate concerns
  • map potential levers of power and spaces for critical investment

Where to from here?

We are continuing to explore this intersection and build off this research. If you are a funder interested in learning more or getting involved in the next phase of the project, you can reach us at  maya.richman@ariadne-network.eu and fieke@riseup.net.