Having that focus led to progress on data collection, accelerated by using Teiger support to bring in a consultant from the Green Web Foundation. Rhizome had also long wanted to create another node on the Solar Protocol Network and used both Teiger funding and the structure of monthly coaching calls to make progress toward installing a server at the 18th Street Arts Center in Los Angeles.
As they wrapped up their collaboration, Rute helped Rhizome ensure the language it used to describe its technical research was accessible to a lay reader. In Fall 2024, Rhizome launched a climate portal that not only shares what it has learned but also keeps tabs on its infrastructure. As Beasley put it, “Having that visibility helps us to check whatever we’re doing—whether it’s launching a new service or a new exhibition project—for unintended ramp-ups of our carbon usage. It gives us tangible, concrete ways to talk about this and to work toward strategies that lower our impact.”
What Beasley and his colleagues learned has already prompted them to make changes that save both emissions and money. And it has opened up a new area for programming and partnerships as they seek to educate and partner with other organizations on digital sustainability. Beasley again: “This won’t be widespread until there are easy, readily available plug-and-play carbon footprint analytics that are similar to, for example, how Google Analytics tracks website visitors. There are still barriers, but they are getting lower—and the right tooling is coming.”