It could suddenly make going carbon neutral a net positive, rather than just a cost., We could have conversations like "If we become carbon neutral, for the price of 20.000$ a year, we'll have access to software that can save us 100.000$ a year in work we don't have to do"
So HN: What are your thoughts on a "green" open source license?
it'd need a bit of work to clearly define what this means.
suppose there's a climate-neutral-licensed plant optimisation tool T. maybe company A operates a coal mine (or whatever), and could save $1m / year by using the tool T. But company A currently doesn't offset any of their pollution, and doing that would cost them $10m, which they would be required to do by the licensing terms of tool T. So, assuming the license terms were enforceable, it wouldnt make purely financial sense for company to use T as the costs of complying with the licensing would exceed the cost reduction of using the tool.
But, could company A stand up a second tiny company B, which is a 1 person operation that has a contract to apply tool T to company A's operations, as an ongoing service? Then the (direct) pollution from company B would be tiny (1 person, 1 office, a network connection and a coffee machine or whatever), so it might only cost $5k / year to offset. But then company A could receive the $1m benefit of T without directly using it, without needing to offset $10m pollution, but perhaps with some additional cost of $50k/year of overhead required for the additional structure of company B.
i.e. in this example in the sense of the productive physical economy, essentially the same thing is happening, in terms of overall environmental impact, but by performing non-productive financial/legal gerrymandering company A might be able to comply with the license without really doing anything.
this could be avoided if the calculation used to figure out a company's environmental impact accounted for the indirect environmental impact of how company's revenues are obtained and costs are incurred -- perhaps through relationships with other companies or other parties that are heavily polluting.
but that'd get complicated! one way to figure this out in an objective way would be to have the state regulate it and estimate the environmental impact of each firm. bureaucracy required would be similar to taxation, but accounting for "how did you make this profit? was it from a productive environmentally sustainable activity, or a non-productive or non sustainable activity?"
then, assuming this bureaucracy was already in place to estimate the climate impact of each organisation, your license could refer to that