Edge
Blog | Sustainability 3 min read

Cleaning Up the Cloud

Is the cloud really just smog? It's time for digital infrastructure to take its carbon footprint more seriously.

WL

Will Lebens

COO & Co-founder

Cleaning Up the Cloud

Microsoft made headlines by sinking servers into the ocean — an experiment in green cooling that captured imaginations but, in reality, amounted to little more than a PR solution. The carbon footprint of the cloud is a serious problem, and it demands serious answers.

The Scale of the Problem

By 2040, digital storage alone is projected to account for 14% of the world's carbon emissions. To put that in perspective, the cloud industry is already dirtier than all air travel combined. Every data centre built, every server rack powered around the clock, every cooling system running non-stop — it all adds up to an environmental cost that the tech industry has been remarkably slow to address.

A Credible Alternative

Edge has grown steadily in both clients and contributors, offering a credible greener alternative to centralised cloud infrastructure. This isn't greenwashing or offsetting — it's a structural change in how digital services are delivered.

Greener by Design

Edge is greener not because of a bolt-on sustainability initiative, but because of how the network is built. Two principles make the difference.

First, Edge reuses existing hardware. Instead of building new data centres filled with purpose-built servers, the network runs on devices that already exist — laptops, PCs, phones, set-top boxes. These machines are already powered on, already connected, and already consuming energy. Edge puts their idle capacity to work, turning waste into utility without adding to the hardware footprint.

Second, Edge reduces the distance between storage and consumption. Traditional cloud providers route data through a handful of massive data centres, often thousands of miles from the end user. Edge distributes content across a network of devices that are geographically closer to the people requesting it. Shorter distances mean less energy consumed in transit, fewer network hops, and a lighter load on the infrastructure that connects them.

Beyond Offsets

The cloud industry's approach to sustainability has largely relied on carbon offsets and renewable energy credits — accounting tricks that balance the books without reducing actual emissions. Edge takes a different path. By eliminating the need for new hardware and minimising the energy required to move data, the network reduces emissions at the source. It's not about compensating for damage — it's about doing less damage in the first place.

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