How to Build Sustainable Websites and Why We Need Them

Mumbai
Sustainable Websites
Illustration by Vivek Warang | Simit Bhagat Studios

In most conversations about climate change, the web rarely comes up. But every website leaves a mark. When someone loads a page, servers, networks, and devices all use energy. When you add up all the visits, the internet has a big effect on the environment. The Information Communication Technology (ICT) sector already accounts for up to 4% of global carbon emissions; more than the aviation industry, and its share is rising. 

This is where sustainable web design comes in. At its simplest, it means building websites that use less energy, produce fewer emissions, and remain accessible and efficient for users. Sustainable websites aren’t just faster and cheaper to run; they also reduce the hidden cost of our digital lives.

Earlier, we shared nonprofit website design examples to inspire organisations to refresh their digital presence. But design is only part of the story; how a site performs environmentally is just as important. That’s where sustainability becomes critical.

Recent studies back this up. The #EcoWeb Report 2025, which analysed 507 climate-sector websites, found that an average homepage emits 1.87 g of CO₂ per visit, but the best-performing sites emit 30 times less. Tools like the Website Carbon Calculator make this impact visible, showing exactly how much carbon a page generates.

An average homepage emits 1.87 g of CO₂ per visit, but the best-performing sites emit 30 times less.

And some organisations are already leading the way. SystemsTree, founded by technologist and writer Siddhesh Wagle, has built a website that produces less than 0.02 g of CO₂ per visit, earning it an A+ sustainability rating. For Wagle, this work is about more than efficiency. It is about values, vision, and responsibility. “Only by knowing where we want to go and where we are, we can take necessary action to reduce this gap,” he writes.

It’s a reminder: sustainable web design is not a niche concern. It is an essential part of climate action. So let’s explore how.

More Than a Lighthouse Score

The #EcoWeb Report 2025 revealed just how uneven the digital landscape is. On average, a homepage has high CO₂ emissions per visit, as discussed earlier in this blog. Furthermore, the best performers managed as little as 0.01 g; the worst hit 21 g, a thirty-fold difference. Page weight was decisive: the lightest 10% averaged 0.76 MB, while the heaviest ran at 21.46 MB. And almost half of that weight, 47%, was images.

Sustainable websites require a shift in mindset: images and scripts aren’t just performance issues; they’re carbon issues.

The lesson is clear. Tools like Google Lighthouse and Ecograder can flag bloated sites, but numbers alone aren’t enough. Sustainable websites require a shift in mindset: images and scripts aren’t just performance issues; they’re carbon issues.

Content as the First Design System

In his blog Othering in Sustainable Tech, Siddhesh Wagle warns against excluding the future from our design choices. “When we consider the future as the ‘other’, we will design tech that will not consider their wellbeing,” he writes.

For websites, this means every line of content, every video, and every design flourish must be weighed against its cost to the future. Accessibility overlaps with sustainability here: cleaner text, compressed visuals, and lighter media loads aren’t just efficient, they are inclusive.

If we treat the future as belonging, not other, our websites can embody care rather than consumption.

Websites like Aline (37.92 KB, 0.014 g CO₂ per visit, A+), Sustainable Creative Charter (132.08 KB, 0.041 g, A+), Branch Magazine (283.65 KB, 0.088 g, A+), and Digital Beacon (82.06 KB, 0.025 g, A+) are considered sustainable because of their low page weights and top A+ ratings. These sites show that design and performance can align with environmental responsibility.

When the Website Lags Behind the Mission

Some organisations have acted on sustainability for decades before their digital identity catches up. SystemsTree itself embodies this. Its site is minimal, clean, and powered by green hosting verified by the Green Web Foundation. The design is simple, but the philosophy is rich, rooted in systems thinking, ethics, empathy, compassion, climate justice, and hope.

As explained in The Importance of Finding One’s True Self to Create Sustainable Tech, sustainability begins inside the technologist. “Finding one’s true self means aligning actions and values with a commitment to environmental and social well-being,” article suggests . In other words: authenticity fuels responsibility. When the self aligns with the mission, websites become carriers of trust, not just information.

Borrowing From the Big Players

Large organisations are beginning to codify digital sustainability. The #EcoWeb Report 2025 showed that 65% of climate-sector websites were already hosted on renewable energy platforms. Some leaders go further, setting weight budgets per page and adopting strict asset policies.

For smaller teams, the lesson isn’t to copy 50-page sustainability manuals. It’s to pick three non-negotiables. For example:

  • Always host on a verified green provider.
  • Set a maximum page weight (under 1 MB).
  • Optimise and compress every image before upload.

As Wagle notes in Current Reality of Tech, ignoring the material costs of digital infrastructure only perpetuates harm. By starting with three basics, even modest websites can resist the myth that sustainability is incompatible with impact.

Operations Are Sustainability Too

In the Lowwwcarbon showcase, the lightest site, One Small Step for Earth, weighs only 6.46 KB, emitting 0.002 g of CO₂ per visit. That means operational habits matter as much as one-time design decisions. Caching, content audits, lightweight CMS choices, and regular testing with the Website Carbon Calculator can keep sites lean. And just as NGOs learned during viral campaigns that operations are branding, digital teams must learn that operations are sustainability. A site neglected after launch will bloat, just as surely as a campaign without logistics will collapse.

A Quick Checklist: Building a Sustainable Website

If you’re starting without a manual, here are three things you can still do today:

  • Pick a green host: choose one verified by the Green Web Foundation.
  • Set weight limits: budget your homepage under 1 MB, images under 100 KB.
  • Measure often: test your site with the Website Carbon Calculator and track progress.

Consistency in these small moves often does more than a glossy sustainability report.

What does sustainability look like beyond the web?

Final Thoughts: Beyond the Playbook

Four voices, four perspectives. The #EcoWeb Report 2025 shows the measurable gap between heavy and light sites. Lowwwcarbon proves that design elegance and efficiency can coexist. SystemsTree demonstrates that a site can be both philosophical and practical, producing under 0.02 g of CO₂ per visit.

The answer is clear: sustainable websites help when you want to scale responsibly. But trust and climate impact begin with how you code, design, and host, every day.

Interested in more examples like these, along with suggestions for your organisation to reduce digital emissions, design lighter platforms, and embed sustainability in your online presence? Sign up for our newsletter. Each issue is full of practical ideas for ethical design, responsible storytelling, and building a web that works for both people and planet.


Rahul More

Video Editor

Rahul works on video editing and motion graphics across various formats. He previously worked in post-production at Sallys, with experience across commercials, web series, and digital content. He has over three years of experience in video editing and motion graphics. He enjoys reading, playing cricket, fish keeping and making short films. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Mass Media (Journalism) and a Diploma in Filmmaking from Rachana Sansad Institute, Mumbai.

Abhinav S S

Illustrator

Abhinav works on in-house blog illustrations, storyboarding and various visual projects aligned with the studio’s creative direction. He is currently pursuing a Bachelor’s degree in Fashion Communication from National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT) Bhopal. He has played competitive cricket for the state of Kerala and has a strong interest in painting and graffiti.

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Swanand Deo

Web Development Specialist

Swanand Deo is a WordPress and Web Development Specialist working on various digital projects. With over a decade of experience in the design and development space, he has collaborated with over 50 national and international clients. He specialises in User Experience (UX) design, WordPress development, and creating engaging digital experiences. He holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Pune.

Aashna Chandra

Graphic Designer

Aashna works on publications, UI/UX and branding projects at SBS. She has previously worked with organisations across the social impact and development space. Her work focuses on layout design, visual identity systems and user interfaces across print and digital formats. She studied at the United Institute of Design, Gandhinagar, specialising in branding, typography, editorial design and packaging.

Vivek Warang

Digital Illustrator

Vivek works on translating ideas into visual narratives. His work ranges from creating storyboards and illustrations to ideation for special visual storytelling projects. He previously worked as an illustrator at OckyPocky. He enjoys telling stories through images and bringing concepts to life through his drawings. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Applied Arts from D.Y. Patil College, Pune, with a specialisation in Illustration.

Rajshree Goswami

Content Writer

Rajshree began her professional journey in Kolkata and has over four years of experience as a creative writer and proofreader for academic papers. At SBS, she works across all content, including blogs, transcripts, quality checks and writing for annual reports. She is an avid reader and enjoys cinema, fiction and creative writing. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in English Honours from West Bengal State University.

Bhavesh Dhote

Founder’s Office

Bhavesh is part of the Founder’s Office, working across in-house operations, social media strategy, strategic initiatives, market research and film production. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Electronics and Telecommunications Engineering with a Diploma in AI and Machine Learning from D.J. Sanghvi College of Engineering, Mumbai. He is also a professional badminton player, marathon runner, trekker and plays euphonium and trumpet.

Manish Mandavkar

Motion Editor

Manish Mandavkar has studied animation at Arena Animation in Mumbai. He has previously worked on animated videos and motion graphics for brands, including Unilever and Zee Movies. An avid gamer, he is also passionate about sketching and photography. He holds a degree in Commerce from the University of Mumbai.

Joel Machado

Film Editor

Mumbai-based creative consultant and film editor Joel Machado has worked on documentaries as well as films in the mainstream Bollywood sector. He was also the Chief Assistant Director on the Jackie Shroff short, “The Playboy, Mr. Sawhney.” In addition to earning a B.Com from Mumbai University, he attended the city’s Digital Academy to hone his script writing skills.

Rohit Sreekumar

Founder’s Office

Rohit is responsible for developing strategic alliances and collaborative initiatives in the social sector. He also works on project management and helps internal teams stay on track. He has previously worked at early-stage startups across product and growth roles. In his free time, he enjoys binge-watching series, gaming and reading. He holds a Master’s degree in Computer Applications from Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Karnataka.

Aliefya Vahanvaty

Sr. Creative Partner

Senior Creative Partner, Aliefya Vahanvaty has worked in a wide range of editorial roles over the course of her career, gaining experience as a correspondent, copy editor, writer, photographer, and assistant editor at publications like the Times of India, Forbes India, Open Magazine, Impact Magazine, and others. In addition to her MA in Sociology from Mumbai University, she also has an MA in Photojournalism from the University of Westminster in the United Kingdom.

Simit Bhagat

Founder

Founder, Simit Bhagat has worked in the fields of filmmaking, project management, and journalism for over 15 years. He has served in a variety of positions for organisations like the Times of India, the Maharashtra Forest Department, the Tata Trusts, and the Thomson Reuters Foundation. From the University of Sussex in the United Kingdom, he earned a Master of Arts in Science, Society, and Development.