Want to Go Green? A New Study Says Full-Time Remote Workers Slash Their Greenhouse Gas Emissions By HalfHybrid employees, meanwhile, cut their emissions by a third.

ByMadeline Garfinkle

Key Takeaways

  • A recent study found that those working from home full-time can slash their greenhouse gas emissions by 54%.
  • However, it's not a net-zero solution, as increased emissions from social activities counteract some of the benefits.

Working remotely? You could be helping the environment.

A recentstudyby the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that those who work from home full-time generate less than half the greenhouse gas emissions than their office-based counterparts. Employees working exclusively from home in the U.S. were estimated to reduce their emissions by 54%, the study found.

Working remotely one day a week only resulted in a 2% emission decrease, largely due to increased non-commuting travel on remote workdays. On the other hand, those working remotely two to four days a week saw emissions reductions of up to 29% compared to on-site workers.

Related:6 Meaningful Ways to Reduce Your Company's Carbon Footprint

The study analyzed various datasets, including Microsoft employee commuting and teleworking behavior, and was conducted by researchers from Cornell University and Microsoft. The primary contributors to emissions reduction among remote workers were decreased office energy use and fewer emissions from daily commutes.

While remote work has the potential to reduce carbon footprints, the study underscores the need for a balanced approach, carefully considering commuting patterns, energy consumption, vehicle ownership, and non-commute-related travel to fully maximize the environmental benefits of remote work.

"People say: 'I work from home, I'm net zero.' That's not true," Fengqi You of Cornell University, a report co-author, toldThe Guardian。是“远程工作的净效益e but a key question is how positive. When people work remotely, they tend to spend more emissions on social activities."

Madeline Garfinkle

Entrepreneur Staff

News Writer

Madeline Garfinkle is a News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. She is a graduate from Syracuse University, and received an MFA from Columbia University.

Related Topics

Business News

This Man Won a $22 Million Lottery Jackpot, But He and His Wife Won't Tell Their Kids — Here's Why

An anonymous caller named "John" shared his story on a recent episode of "The Ramsey Show."

Side Hustle

5 Critical Lessons I Learned Turning My Side Hustle Into a Million-Dollar Business

These tried-and-true tips will save you time, scale your business, and make you money.

Business News

Social Media App X Is Struggling to Attract Users — But Another Once-Beloved Platform Is Making an Unexpected Comeback

Agency executives say brands that have returned to X aren't spending as much on advertising.

领导

This 27-Year-Old Harvard Dropout Started a Hedge Fund Out of a Garage — Now She Manages Nearly $1 Billion in Assets

Eva Shang, who met co-founder and fellow Harvard undergraduate Christian Haigh at a club on campus, admits it's "very unusual for college students to start a hedge fund."

Legal

How Identical Twin Brothers Brought Down Drug Lord El Chapo's $2 Billion Empire

The incredible story of Jay and Pete Flores, who went from El Chapo's right-hand men to the informants who helped bring him down.