A group of Sydney organisations and startups have come together to form a super squad of tech folks tackling climate change and helping protect the environment.
Led by TechSydney, the Envirotech Alliance is focused on bringing people in the tech space together to discuss scalable solutions to climate change, while combining efforts to build businesses with positive environmental impact.
Founding members include co-working space and startup community Fishburners, energy community Spark Club, womenโs tech startup Girl Geek Academy and startup communications agency Launch Group.
Speaking to StartupSmart, Girl Geek Academy co-founder and chief Sarah Moran says the initiative reflects a broader sea change in the Aussie startup scene.
โTechnology exists already to help with what we need to achieve,โ she says.
โBut the key thing about technologists themselves is that theyโre always thinking about the future and whatโs next.โ
Over the past 12 months or so, weโve seen โa tipping pointโ in the startup community, Moran says.
โWhatโs the point of working on future technology if thereโs no world for that tech to succeed in?โ
โFor some people it has been that stark,โ she adds.
Itโs not just a handful of greenies that are thinking this way anymore, itโs the mainstream of the tech community.
โSo our meetups are starting to look different and feel different, because the conversations weโre having are different,โ Moran says.
โHaving a space thatโs actually dedicated to that becomes extra important.โ
For Fishburners, a huge community hub for tech startups, itโs about instilling the importance of environmental considerations at the earliest stages, and supporting startups to build them into the fabric of their business.
These are startups that could grow into the next Atlassians, Canvas and Culture Amps; in the future, they could have a significant role to play in the Australian economy. As such, they have a responsibility to think about the environment and climate change.
โThatโs why Iโm so keen to be talking about it now,โ Fishburners chief Nicole OโBrien tells StartupSmart.
โSo at the early stages of their development they can build it in from the beginning โฆ thatโs where the change is going to happen,โ she adds.
โIt happens too slowly at the political level. As we know, with a lot of these movements they need to happen at the grassroots.โ
For OโBrien, this means Fishburners has something of a responsibility too.
โWeโre in a really unique position to play a role in informing, educating and providing the resources and tools for our startups to play a roll at that grassroots level,โ she says.
And, while acting ethically is one side of the story, thereโs also a strong business case here too. The way a business acts now could genuinely affect its ability to trade in the future, Moran notes.
Already, for example, BlackRock has stopped investing in coal projects.
โWhere you get your investment from will start to be reflective of what your own environmental policies are,โ Moran suggests.
โThatโs the way the world is going, so get on board or you may be really damaging your future companyโs opportunities.โ
OโBrien agrees, and hopes founders can see the opportunity of taking climate change and environmental issues seriouslyย โ or the danger of not.
โThatโs really what consumers want,โ she says.
โI do think there will be a good payback on that, eventually.โ
The first Envirotech Alliance meetup will be at Fishburners on March 17.
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