I made Climatescape after seeing dozens of people go through a similar process of cataloging interesting climate-focused companies in spreadsheets, notes, and elsewhere. The goal is to unify these efforts and provide the content free to anyone who might find it useful. The website is open source[1] and content is Creative Commons licensed.
This is really just the beginning of what I'd like to see the project become. We want to go deeper by including key org attributes like headcount, location, investments, and more. There are also plans to increase the breadth of the database by including books, podcasts, events, data sets, and other important resources related to climate.
If anyone is interested in contributing please get in touch! brendan [at] sinceresoftware.co
Cool resource! I just started down this path as a strict requirement for my next career move. It would be awesome to include job listings and requirements for people that want to find a job at a climate focused company.
I feel like political/advocacy/regulatory should be a category. Organizations like Vote Solar, SEIA, Mission:Data, Sierra Club, etc. have most impact fighting climate change because the policies they push through have huge industry-wide consequences.
Also, for energy, how wide do you want to cast the net? Solar and wind generation is now more cost effective than fossil generation, so traditional utilities and utility vendors are now doing huge climate-change fighting efforts, just because it's cheaper. For example, GE has a solar division that is developing huge commercial projects that offset a fuck ton of carbon. Should GE be on the list?
I worry that this list is giving the impression that fighting climate chance is a selfless endeavor, when nowadays much of the carbon offset work (especially in energy) is done by established entities because it's simply cheaper and in their self interest.
Also, what about governments? Countries, states, cities, and regulators are passing more and more 100% carbon free mandates. Those are vastly more impactful that anything else on this list. Shouldn't they be included on the list?
Finally, a search or full list to Ctrl+F would be nice so I don't have to click through multiple categories to see if a company is included.
Thanks very much for the effort to put this list together, and I wish you the best of luck!
You bring up some great points regarding categorization–choosing a sensible taxonomy has been by far the hardest part of this project so far. I'd love some help in this area if you or anyone else is interested.
> Should GE be on the list?
I've been asking myself this same question for weeks and haven't come to a conclusion yet. What do you think? How about O&G companies with big green tech budgets?
> Also, what about governments? ... Shouldn't they be included on the list?
I think this would be a very interesting data point to track indeed, though I suspect someone else is already tracking this.
It is interesting to see a list of organizations compiled in one place, to get a sense of what is going on in the world.
But I read the headline wrong. I saw the words "Mapping" and "landscape", and was expecting actual maps. I thought I'd be looking at visualizations of where in the world each organization is having an impact.
Same here, I expected a list or map which gives an user the ability to see which organizations or projects operate nearby.
It would be really cool if you could see which projects are nearby and you might be able to participate in.
I really like the idea though. Hopefully your site will inspire others.
We used to maintain an actual map of climate-impactful orgs on https://Climate.Careers. Very few people used it, so we took it down — but we still have all the data of course!
Since forestry is so big, I would suggest to keep it separate. Also broad biodiversity and nature organisations probably should have a separate category, not me under land use.
Thanks for putting this together! I've wondered before if Kittyhawk and other flying car companies count as climate-saving organizations. Flying small personal aircraft will always use vastly more energy per mile than vehicles that can roll along the ground - and even if there are no emissions in flight, the energy cost and likely emissions of making the batteries and equipment will be non-negligible.
My personal opinion is that we're not going to convince people to stop flying, so we should decarbonize air travel regardless of its relative efficiency.
Hi Brendan! Evan here from ClimateCareers! Https://climate.careers
My team and I are already working on the next iteration of our product, which will be going far beyond jobs. I'd love to find time to chat and explore opportunities to collaborate!
Is this project intentionally leaving out political organizations? Fighting the politics of austerity and capitalist oligarchy is more important than evaluating photovoltaic efficiency/viability.
Might be the mobile view, but the descriptions are both cut off and meaningless.
> We deliver when others can’t. We conduct research and development, manage
Is all that is visible. It goes on to say (in the full description) that they do this R&D for clients. So like what do they actually do, beyond claiming they're better than you and me?
Thanks for taking a look. It's a laborious process to collect good descriptions for each submission–some are better than others. The text is cut off intentionally, rather lazily now, but we're planning on making it clearer visually that this is intentional and allowing visitors to expand each record.
[+] [-] bloudermilk|6 years ago|reply
I made Climatescape after seeing dozens of people go through a similar process of cataloging interesting climate-focused companies in spreadsheets, notes, and elsewhere. The goal is to unify these efforts and provide the content free to anyone who might find it useful. The website is open source[1] and content is Creative Commons licensed.
This is really just the beginning of what I'd like to see the project become. We want to go deeper by including key org attributes like headcount, location, investments, and more. There are also plans to increase the breadth of the database by including books, podcasts, events, data sets, and other important resources related to climate.
If anyone is interested in contributing please get in touch! brendan [at] sinceresoftware.co
[1]: github.com/bloudermilk/climatescape
[+] [-] nolroz|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sails|6 years ago|reply
You should share this on the climateaction.tech [0] group, lots if very interesting conversations happening and likely a good source of companies too!
[0] https://climateaction.tech/
[+] [-] hyzyla|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|6 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] diafygi|6 years ago|reply
Also, for energy, how wide do you want to cast the net? Solar and wind generation is now more cost effective than fossil generation, so traditional utilities and utility vendors are now doing huge climate-change fighting efforts, just because it's cheaper. For example, GE has a solar division that is developing huge commercial projects that offset a fuck ton of carbon. Should GE be on the list?
I worry that this list is giving the impression that fighting climate chance is a selfless endeavor, when nowadays much of the carbon offset work (especially in energy) is done by established entities because it's simply cheaper and in their self interest.
Also, what about governments? Countries, states, cities, and regulators are passing more and more 100% carbon free mandates. Those are vastly more impactful that anything else on this list. Shouldn't they be included on the list?
Finally, a search or full list to Ctrl+F would be nice so I don't have to click through multiple categories to see if a company is included.
Thanks very much for the effort to put this list together, and I wish you the best of luck!
[+] [-] bloudermilk|6 years ago|reply
You bring up some great points regarding categorization–choosing a sensible taxonomy has been by far the hardest part of this project so far. I'd love some help in this area if you or anyone else is interested.
> Should GE be on the list?
I've been asking myself this same question for weeks and haven't come to a conclusion yet. What do you think? How about O&G companies with big green tech budgets?
> Also, what about governments? ... Shouldn't they be included on the list?
I think this would be a very interesting data point to track indeed, though I suspect someone else is already tracking this.
> Finally, a search or full list to Ctrl+F
Agreed, added this to our backlog.
[+] [-] chrisweekly|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] codingdave|6 years ago|reply
But I read the headline wrong. I saw the words "Mapping" and "landscape", and was expecting actual maps. I thought I'd be looking at visualizations of where in the world each organization is having an impact.
[+] [-] Pietertje|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jsingleton|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] evanhynes|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bloudermilk|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jawache|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jkaljundi|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] blueski|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bloudermilk|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] evanhynes|6 years ago|reply
My team and I are already working on the next iteration of our product, which will be going far beyond jobs. I'd love to find time to chat and explore opportunities to collaborate!
Sending you an email now :)
[+] [-] beastcoast|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] imagetic|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] nullreference00|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bloudermilk|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lucb1e|6 years ago|reply
> We deliver when others can’t. We conduct research and development, manage
Is all that is visible. It goes on to say (in the full description) that they do this R&D for clients. So like what do they actually do, beyond claiming they're better than you and me?
[+] [-] bloudermilk|6 years ago|reply