Hi Philip! Philip Withnall <phi...@tecnocode.co.uk> wrote: ... > What steps do you think the Foundation could take to reduce its > environmental impact, and the environmental impact of the project as a > whole?
I composed this in my head before seeing the other responses to your mail, so you'll have to forgive me if I repeat any of the points that have already been made First, thank you for raising this issue - we haven't seriously looked at the Foundation's environmental impact, and given the climate crisis we ought to look at this. Maybe the Foundation could even take a lead on this issue, which other free/open source projects could follow. I suspect that the biggest environmental impact that the Foundation has is through travel. The one concrete idea I've had for this in the past would be to amend the travel policy, to allow people to take ground transportation rather than flying, even if it comes at additional cost (within certain limits, of course). This would have to be discussed with the Travel Committee but it seems like a fairly straightforward, practical step. Outside of this, it gets a bit trickier. One of the Foundation's goals has actually been to facilitate *more* travel: we want more hackfests, greater attendance at our conferences, and so on. The other factor that makes it tricky is that the Foundation can only influence behaviour to a certain degree: we can encourage the community to hold certain types of events, and we can decide whether to support plans that are brought to us or not, but we can't independently decide which events will be held or where they will be held. That said, I think we should investigate all the options for both our travel policy and our events strategy. This might include some of the following: - Have hackfest organisers consider the carbon footprint of their event, particularly when it comes to picking a location - Encourage regional (ie. continental) events rather than global ones, and take steps to reduce the amount of intercontinental travel to these events - this might mean things like flying fewer people from Europe to GNOME.Asia and to our North American events (self-sustaining regional events are something that the Foundation should push to support anyway, I think) - Work to increase the number of local keynote speakers at our conferences, rather than those from other continents - Come up with innovative ways to avoid or limit travel. Ideas for this: - Remote "sprints" could replace hackfests in some cases. - Have linked events happen simultaneously in multiple-locations; for example, you could have a hackfest happen in one location in Europe and another in South America, and link them using video conferencing, or organise the work into location-specific streams. - Work to provide a reliable video conferencing solution for all Foundation members This is just a preliminary list of ideas and I think that we should ask the community to provide their own suggestions. The board should then consider the ideas we have, and ensure that any agreed changes are implemented. This is something that I'd be enthusiastic about and would certainly support, if I were re-elected. Thanks again, Allan _______________________________________________ foundation-list mailing list foundation-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-list