For years, the conversation around digital sustainability has revolved around a relatively narrow set of concerns. Organisations have focused heavily on energy consumption, carbon reporting, data-centre emissions, cooling efficiency, and infrastructure optimisation. Entire strategies have been built around greener hosting, lower compute footprints, and cloud migration programmes framed primarily through environmental metrics.
None of these things are unimportant.
Energy matters. Carbon matters. Infrastructure efficiency matters. In an increasingly digital world, the environmental footprint of technology estates deserves serious attention.
But the problem is that many organisations have mistaken one dimension of digital sustainability for the whole concept itself.
The real sustainability crisis inside most organisations is no longer just environmental.
It is operational, cognitive, structural, and human.
Because while leaders focus on greener infrastructure externally, many organisations are quietly creating enormous invisible waste internally. Cognitive waste. Process waste. Complexity waste. Dependency waste. Organisational energy loss so deeply embedded into digital environments that people now treat it as normal operating reality rather than systemic dysfunction.
We are optimising the wrong layer of the system.
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