Green Surveillance: Imagining a Sustainable Internet of Things

ERC (European Research Council)HORIZON-ERCID: 101141278
EC Contribution
€25,000
Consortium Size
1 orgs
Start Year
2025
Summary

The emerging Internet of Things (IoT) constitutes a communication system that enables comprehensive and continuous monitoring of the effects of human activity on Earth’s ecosystems, thus potentially facilitating the green transition to sustainable forms of social life. But the scope and the scale of the necessary monitoring simultaneously entails surveillance, not only of natural and built environments, but of persons and their actions as well, extending far beyond the online tracking of citizens and consumers which over the past decade has generated widespread public debate and motivated substantial legislation regulating digital infrastructures in the European Union and beyond.The GREENWATCH project anticipates and assesses the ethical dilemmas that follow from green surveillance: What kinds and which degrees of surveillance will the present human cohort be prepared to accept in the coming decades to ensure the livelihood of the species centuries and millennia into the future? Comparing the three world regions driving the development of IoT – Europe, the United States, and China – the study maps the empirical scenarios being projected for IoT as part of the green transition; theorizes the process of green surveillance as information feedback to national and international systems of governance as well as to individual citizens, consumers, and corporations; and evaluates both the scenarios and the practice of surveillance against the background of classic philosophical traditions of local and global social justice, complemented by recent conceptions of climate justice and environmental justice. Through IoT, Earth is sending a message that the human species is obliged to respond to, across ideological and civilizational divides, for survival and, at best, individual and collective human flourishing (eudaimonia).

Consortium (1)

Project Results (4)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (3)
Can you trust climate information? How and why powerful players are misleading the public
· 2025DOI
Klaus Jensen, Semahat Elbeyi
Encoding and decoding in the human–machine discourse
Communication Theory· 2025DOI
Klaus Bruhn Jensen
Information Integrity about Climate Science: A Systematic Review
· 2025DOI
null null, Ece Elbeyi, Klaus Bruhn Jensen, Melissa Aronczyk, Jusen Asuka, Gizem Ceylan, John Cook, Gabor Erdelyi, Heather Ford, Carlos Milani, Eni Mustafaraj, Fredrick Ogenga, Sharon Yadin, Philip N. Howard, Sebastián Valenzuela
Deliverables (1)
Data Management Plan
Green Surveillance: Imagining a Sustainable Internet of Things — EU Project | Xfunding