It is widely recognised that digital technologies have a footprint, from energy use to material consumption and electronic waste. What is less widely known is their handprint, the positive environmental and social impact they can enable when designed and deployed responsibly. This handprint can be significantly larger than the footprint when energy-efficient and digital solutions enable emissions reductions beyond their direct lifecycle impacts.

Quantitative assessments of carbon handprints in fact show that enabled or avoided emissions can exceed the direct footprint of technologies by several multiples. For example, sector-level analyses indicate that digital solutions could enable avoided emissions equivalent to approximately 5–10 times the ICT sector’s own greenhouse gas emissions. Empirical studies further demonstrate that digitalisation and energy-efficient system optimisation can reduce energy use and associated emissions by 10–30 % in buildings and industrial applications.

Sustainable innovation builds on this principle. It applies technology intentionally to deliver environmental and social value while creating real economic opportunity. Instead of treating sustainability as an add-on, it embeds impact directly into how digital solutions are conceived, built and scaled. Sustainable innovation focuses on practical, scalable tools that support a green, fair and just transition, enabling decarbonisation, circularity, inclusion, wellbeing and more resilient systems.

In this landscape, tech SMEs play a crucial enabling role. Their agility, specialised expertise, and proximity to real-world needs enable them to transform emerging technologies into concrete environmental, societal, and governance (ESG) solutions across various sectors.

By developing homegrown, trustworthy and purpose-driven technologies, these SMEs contribute not only to sustainability outcomes but also to a resilient and sovereign European tech ecosystem that strengthens long-term competitiveness while advancing societal goals.

Focus Group ICT Sustainability

Activities & Benefits in joining the Group:
– Visibility at European level
– Develop DIGITAL SME’s positions on sustainability-related policy initiatives & contribute to sustainability frameworks
– Receive exclusive information about project & policy
– Connect with other “green enablers” and demand-side companies
– Contribute to shaping the methodologies of the European Green Digital Coalition (EGDC)

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Services and tools on Sustainability for SMEs

It adopts a market-driven and industry-led approach to ensure the relevance and applicability of skills acquired by the European workforce. With the support of 29 partners from ICT associations, clusters, chambers of commerce, universities, Vocational Educational Training providers, and sustainability experts, the project will align educational programs with current and future labour market needs.

The Coalition was officially launched on Digital Day 2021 in Porto, formed by 26 CEOs of ICT companies who signed a Declaration to support the Green and Digital Transformation of the EU. By signing the declaration, companies commit to act in the following areas:

  • To invest in the development and deployment of greener digital technologies and services;
  • To develop methods and tools to measure the net impact of green digital technologies on the environment and climate by joining forces with NGOs and relevant expert organisations;
  • To co-create with representatives of other sectors recommendations and guidelines for the green digital transformation.

Providing an ecosystem that creates and supports the configurations, methodologies, production techniques, decisions and actions at all different levels and stages of the equipment manufacturing value chain so as to achieve the goals of:

  1. Increase in energy efficiency;
  2. Decrease of raw material through to the second use of parts or material (including waste from manufacturing process);
  3. Customer centricity;
  4. On-demand manufacturing and best meet the Industry 4.0 objectives of operational excellence, while increasing efficiency, reduce waste, boost competitiveness and lower costs for manufacturers.

The unjustified Russian aggression in Ukraine has refocused international efforts on energy dependence and supply chain resilience.

The Get Digital: Go Green & Be Resilient initiative features a catalogue with innovative digital solutions. Ten selected companies will get access to two workshops focused on showcasing and facilitating the acceleration of the uptake of innovative solutions, helping the European industry become increasingly energy-independent and supply-chain resilient.

SMEs4SD strengthens SME employer organisations’ role in social dialogue and policy making, focusing on advancing sustainable labour and social policies, ensuring SMEs’ perspectives are represented in the EU Semester and in the implementation of EU initiatives that drive a fair twin transition. By preparing SMEs for the transition to digitalisation, artificial intelligence, and the shift to a climate-neutral economy, the project promotes a fair, inclusive, and sustainable transformation. Through capacity building, consultation, and collective bargaining, it equips SMEs to integrate sustainability into their practices while remaining competitive.

Relevant Publications

The repair and maintenance of products is a complex value chain and digital SMEs participate through all steps. To achieve a Right to Repair and support the objectives of the European Green Deal, the needs, points of view, and impacts to digital SMEs must be taken into consideration. Digital SMEs are key in providing essential software and hardware tools in the aftersales markets, effectively making the Right to Repair a reality for European consumers as well as for other small businesses.

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The goal of transforming Europe into a globally competitive and climate-neutral digitalised economy rests on two pillars: the green and digital transitions. DIGITAL SME proposes to define a sustainable digital transformation along three interconnected dimensions:

  1. Sustainable B2B digitalisation: Building on long-term B2B relationships rather than closed “off-the-shelf” solutions which lead to dependency;
  2. Green(er) technologies and a circular economy: A digital sector that saves resources, increases efficiency, and allows the repairability and reuse of products;
  3. Innovation-enabling policy and regulation: A holistic approach to rule-making that supports innovation by emphasising software and hardware openness.
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