Oakland entrepreneur’s app empowers people to save the environment

Catastrophic climate change is looming. The Earth just endured its 12 hottest months in 125,000 years, and scientists say humans can only avert ecological disaster, if we cut greenhouse gas emissions by 40 to 70% by 2050.

That may sound daunting, but Oakland entrepreneur Sanchali Pal said it is within people’s power to make meaningful choices in their own lives. Her free new app, Commons, helps people track and reduce their carbon footprint — the total amount of carbon dioxide and other emissions they generate — by tracking how they spend money on food, utilities, clothes, furniture or travel.

“Basically, I wanted to make it easier for people to make sustainable choices,” Pal said. “I knew, as a consumer myself, how hard it was, how much work it took to get the information required to actually make progress and measurably lower emissions.”

The Boston-reared Pal was first inspired to track her own carbon footprint during college at Princeton. She subsequently lived and worked in India and Ethiopia, where she saw how people’s daily lives were increasingly compromised by rising temperatures, drought, floods or access to water.  After monitoring her own activities in an Excel spreadsheet for six years, she lowered her own emissions by 30% and saved about $2,000 a year.

With the Commons app, users input basic lifestyle information, including the size of their homes, how often they fly and how often they eat meat; meat production is known to require large amounts of land and involve the destruction of forests. If users choose to connect the app to their credit or debit cards, it automatically estimates the emissions of each purchase to provide a real-time update. The app also provides rewards, which users can take in cash, donate to an organization or redeem for carbon offsetting.

“To have a sustainable lifestyle, it doesn’t have to be extreme,” Pal said. “You don’t have to be vegan, you don’t have to stop flying, but you can make a lot of important progress towards reducing emissions with choices that are better for you, too.”

Q. What prompted your interest in this?

A. During my senior year at Princeton, I was taking a sustainable economics class and saw the documentary, “Food Inc.” After tracking my carbon footprint in an Excel spreadsheet, I thought, if people lowered their emissions even 5 or 10%, and hundreds of thousands of people were making these choices, that would matter a lot.

Q. What changes really surprised you?

A. I was eating about 12 meals with meat per week. By cutting that down to two, I calculated I was taking half a car off the road every year. I didn’t have to go fully vegetarian. What if my entire dining hall of 250 people at Princeton did that? That would be taking 125 cars off the road each year.I now eat meat once a week. I still fly, but I think about whether the trip is worth it and whether it fits into my carbon budget.

Q. With people tracking their carbon footprints, does that put too much onus on individuals? A 2017 study showed that major corporations have created the majority of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions since 1988.

A. Yes, climate change was set in motion by decisions that governments and companies have been making over hundreds of years. But that doesn’t mean we’re powerless to make a difference. Households influence over 65% of global emissions through their spending choices, how we heat and power our homes, whether we buy clothes new, the food we buy, how we travel. We have the ability to send a signal to companies about the world we want to live in with our spending choices.

Q. How does linking your spending to the app track your emissions?

A. Say, you spent $50 on gasoline at Shell, and you live in Oakland. The price of gasoline here is $5 a gallon, which means you bought 10 gallons of gasoline — then the carbon footprint is 100kg of CO2. Meanwhile, maybe you made a separate purchase of $50 at a local thrift store. The app assigns that a zero-footprint because buying clothes that already exist is a sustainable purchase. We show you a real-time feed of emissions and which purchases are sustainable.

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