Have Subway Surfers caught a whole new wave?
The makers of the most downloaded video games in the world – including Sybo, creators of Subway Surfers, and Rovio, the company behind Angry Birds – have committed to take measurable steps to fight climate change. They were spurred to action in part by a groundbreaking report co-produced by GRID-Arendal and the UN Environment Programme (UNEP). The ‘Playing for the Planet’ report, originally released in March of this year, spotlighted how video game companies have enormous potential to help the world move toward sustainability – and just a few months later, many of those companies stepped up to start doing their part.
CEOs from Sony Interactive Entertainment, Microsoft, Google Stadia, Supercell, and nine other AAA gaming firms and platforms (each with at least 5 million players) announced climate commitments at the UN Climate Action Summit, held on the occasion of the UN General Assembly at UN Headquarters in New York, September 23, 2019. This event launched the Playing for the Planet Alliance (P4P), which will support the gaming industry in working toward UNEP goals and tackling global challenges far more ambitious than any one company would otherwise attempt alone.
GRID-Arendal Senior Economist Trista Patterson, lead author of the report, noted the scale of the group's ambition. ‘The alliance has already accelerated new corporate climate actions. Working together can create astoundingly rapid, transformative change’, she said. ‘Folks from this industry revel in a challenge and they’re bringing creative, global, group-think solutions to the table’.
Altogether, 21 companies, which reach a combined 970 million gamers, have joined the alliance and publicly set new green goals for themselves. A few highlights:
- Microsoft pledged to cut its game-related supply chain emissions 30 per cent by 2030 and launch a pilot program to certify 825,000 Xbox consoles as carbon neutral.
- Sony Interactive will introduce low-power suspend mode for the next generation of its PlayStation.
- Supercell, Rovio, Sybo and Space Ape will offset at least part of the CO2 emissions resulting from their players’ gaming activities, with some companies pledging to go carbon-neutral and sharing their methodologies.
- Wild Works and Green Man Gaming will invest in tree-planting initiatives.
Companies participating in the P4P Alliance include Creative Mobile, E-Line Media, Google Stadia, Green Man Gaming, iDreamSky, Internet of Elephants, Microsoft, Niantic Inc, Pixelberry, Reliance Games, Rovio, Space Ape, Sports Interactive, Supercell, Sony Interactive Entertainment, Strange Loop, Sybo, Twitch, Ubisoft, and WildWorks.