Saavedra et al 2025: "Environmental Impact of CI/CD Pipelines" https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.26413 It isn't good news… #nwit
Environmental Impact of CI/CD Pipelines

CI/CD pipelines are widely used in software development, yet their environmental impact, particularly carbon and water footprints (CWF), remains largely unknown to developers, as CI service providers typically do not disclose such information. With the growing environmental impact of cloud computing, understanding the CWF of CI/CD services has become increasingly important. This work investigates the CWF of using GitHub Actions, focusing on open-source repositories where usage is free and unlimited for standard runners. We build upon a methodology from the Cloud Carbon Footprint framework and we use the largest dataset of workflow runs reported in the literature to date, comprising over 2.2 million workflow runs from more than 18,000 repositories. Our analysis reveals that the GitHub Actions ecosystem results in a substantial CWF. Our estimates for the carbon footprint in 2024 range from 150.5 MTCO2e in the most optimistic scenario to 994.9 MTCO2e in the most pessimistic scenario, while the water footprint ranges from 1,989.6 to 37,664.5 kiloliters. The most likely scenario estimates are 456.9 MTCO2e for carbon footprint and 5,738.2 kiloliters for water footprint. To provide perspective, the carbon footprint in the most likely scenario is equivalent to the carbon captured by 7,615 urban trees in a year, and the water footprint is comparable to the water consumed by an average American family over 5,053 years. We explore strategies to mitigate this impact, primarily by reducing wasted computational resources. Key recommendations include deploying runners in regions whose energy production has a low environmental impact such as France and the United Kingdom, implementing stricter deactivation policies for scheduled runs and aligning their execution with periods when the regional energy mix is more environmentally favorable, and reducing the size of repositories.

arXiv.org

@gvwilson ooof! thanks for sharing! These numbers are REAL crazy and NOT surprising. If you start reading the article, please receive all my encouragements to live-toot quotes and findings 🙏

> In 2023, Ireland's GHG emissions are estimated to be 58.82 million tonnes carbon dioxide equivalent

»Our estimates for the carbon footprint in 2024 range from 150.5 MTCO2e in the most optimistic scenario to 994.9 MTCO2e«

That's a lot of Irelands... we're talking in the range of 2-17x Ireland!

@gvwilson Aviation is at around 882 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, so that means CI/CD pipelines can even exceed the 2% share of global CO2 emissions seen from aviation??

I mean, it still doesn't surprise me... the wastefulness is insane, and there are so so many data centers.

I wonder if the authors also have raw numbers from the energy usage of GitHub et al's data centers to correlate with.

Please correct me if I went wrong somewhere...

@gvwilson cc @hanno in case you have time to look