How the digital revolution is quietly contributing to climate change, and what UK businesses can do about it.
When you clicked on this article, you probably didn't think about the carbon emissions involved. After all, it's just a webpage, right? But data centres, which power everything from websites to social media and digital ads, account for 2.5 per cent of global CO2 emissions - more than the entire aviation industry at 2.1 per cent. That innocent click? It's part of a much bigger picture.
The Invisible Energy Drain
Every time someone visits your website, watches a video, or downloads a file, it triggers a chain reaction of energy consumption. From the data centres hosting your content to the network infrastructure carrying it, and finally to the device displaying it—each step requires electricity. Globally, the average web page produces approximately 0.8 grams CO2 equivalent per pageview. For a website with 10,000 monthly page views, that's 102 kg CO2e per year.
It might not sound like much, but multiply that across the millions of websites and billions of daily interactions, and you've got what experts are calling the internet's carbon problem. The digital sector's footprint is expected to double within three years, making this one of the fastest-growing sources of emissions globally.
The mechanics are surprisingly straightforward. When someone loads your website, their request travels through multiple data centres and network points before reaching your hosting server. The server processes the request, retrieves your content, and sends it back through the same infrastructure maze. Meanwhile, cooling systems work overtime to prevent these powerful machines from overheating, and backup systems stand ready in case anything fails.
Think about it this way: if your website were a physical shop, it would be one that never closes, never turns off the lights, and has backup generators running constantly. The comparison becomes even starker when you consider that a single online ad campaign delivering one million impressions generates the same carbon emissions as a round trip flight from Boston to London.
Why This Matters for British Businesses
For UK businesses, this presents both a challenge and an opportunity. With over 90% of UK adults owning smartphones and internet penetration among the highest in Europe, your website likely serves as the primary touchpoint for customers. But as awareness grows, consumers are increasingly factoring sustainability into their purchasing decisions.
Studies show 85% of consumers are more likely to buy from a business with a reputation for sustainability, whilst research shows that 90% of SMEs are keen to tackle climate change, but find it difficult to know how or where to start to find the right solutions to reduce their carbon footprint. This creates a perfect storm where businesses want to act sustainably, customers expect it, but many don't know where to begin with their digital footprint.
The UK government has been pushing businesses toward net-zero targets, with 25 businesses adopting emissions-cutting projects supported with £51.9 million as part of Plan for Change to drive economic growth and rebuild Britain. However, digital emissions often slip through the cracks of corporate sustainability strategies, despite representing a significant and growing portion of overall business emissions.
Small and medium enterprises are particularly affected. The annual environmental footprint of a user of a company's IT system is roughly equivalent to the air pollution of a 1,926 mile car ride (around 788kg of CO2), the energy usage of charging 100,540 smartphones (about 1,520 kWh of energy), and 428 showers (23,555 litres of water). For businesses with hundreds or thousands of website visitors monthly, these numbers quickly add up.
The Wasteful Web
The problem isn't just about energy consumption—it's about efficiency. Much of the web's carbon footprint comes from poorly optimised websites and wasteful digital practices. Studies show that up to 70 per cent of programmatic ad spend is wasted on ads that are never seen by a real person, representing enormous amounts of energy spent for zero impact.
Similarly, many websites are loaded with unnecessary features: auto-playing videos, excessive animations, oversized images, and bloated code that requires more processing power to run. It's like building a house with the heating on full blast and all the windows open.
Research from OVO Energy found that if every adult in the UK sent one fewer "thank you" email a day, it would save 16,433 tonnes of carbon a year. If simple email habits can have such an impact, imagine what optimising website performance could achieve.
The advertising industry exemplifies this waste problem. Digital advertising relies on real-time bidding systems that ping multiple servers every time an ad slot becomes available. Even if no ad is ultimately shown, the computational process still consumes energy. Meanwhile, tracking scripts follow users across websites, constantly sending data back to analytics platforms, creating additional digital traffic.
Building a Lighter Web
So how can businesses reduce their website's carbon footprint without sacrificing functionality or user experience? The answer lies in what the industry calls "sustainable web design"—an approach that prioritises efficiency and purposeful design choices.
Start with Hosting
Choose green hosting providers to minimise your carbon footprint. Many hosting companies now offer renewable energy-powered servers, and some even offset their remaining emissions. While switching hosting providers might seem daunting, many green hosts offer migration services to make the transition seamless. And, of course, the team at Accent can help you through this process.
Optimise Your Images
Images typically account for the largest portion of a webpage's file size. Converting images to modern formats like WebP can reduce file sizes by up to 80% without noticeable quality loss. Similarly, implementing lazy loading—where images only load when they're about to be viewed—can dramatically reduce initial page load requirements.
Streamline Your Code
Lean coding and scripting will become more mainstream. Long and complex code increases server load times, slows down web browsing, and leads to higher energy consumption. Remove unused CSS, minimise JavaScript, and eliminate unnecessary plugins. Every line of code that doesn't serve a purpose is energy wasted.
Design for Dark Mode
According to Google data, in dark screen mode, power consumption can be significantly reduced by 63%. While this primarily affects user device battery life, it also reduces overall energy consumption when multiplied across millions of users.
Embrace Minimalism
In 2025, web sustainability will evolve beyond basic optimisation, focusing on creating environmentally friendly websites as designers and developers take a more holistic approach to reducing digital carbon footprints. This often means embracing cleaner, more minimalist designs that load faster and consume less energy.
Implement Caching
Proper caching strategies can dramatically reduce server load by storing frequently accessed content closer to users. Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) serve files from servers nearest to your visitors, reducing both load times and energy consumption.
Making It Measurable
The first step in reducing your website's carbon footprint is measuring it. Tools like the Website Carbon Calculator allow you to input your URL and get an instant assessment of your site's emissions. Digital Carbon Online automatically monitors website CO2e emissions over time, helping you reduce and report your website's digital carbon footprint.
Many businesses are surprised to discover their website's environmental impact. A typical corporate website might generate several tonnes of CO2 annually, equivalent to driving thousands of miles. But unlike other emissions sources, website carbon footprints can often be dramatically reduced with relatively simple changes.
The key is treating carbon efficiency as a design principle from the start, rather than an afterthought. This means questioning whether every feature, image, and piece of functionality truly adds value for users. If it doesn't enhance the user experience or business objectives, it might not be worth the carbon cost.
The Road Ahead
Sustainable Web Design helps reduce carbon emissions associated with the internet. Additionally, these practices not only benefit the environment but also result in faster, more efficient websites that users love to interact with. It's a rare case where doing good for the planet also improves business outcomes.
As we move through 2025, sustainable web design is shifting from nice-to-have to necessity. With the UK committed to reaching net zero by 2050 and increasing regulatory scrutiny on business emissions, companies that get ahead of this trend will find themselves better positioned for the future.
The internet revolution has transformed how we work, shop, and communicate. Now it's time for the next revolution: making our digital world as sustainable as the physical one. Your website might be virtual, but its impact on the planet is very real. The question isn't whether businesses should act on their digital carbon footprint—it's whether they can afford not to.
Every click counts, every page load matters, and every website owner has the power to make a difference.