Spotify has announced a novelty for its desktop version that can help reduce the user’s carbon footprint.
The new function allows you to download and save a playlist on your computer so that you can listen to music and podcasts when you are not connected, similar to the download button in the Spotify application for mobile devices.
In announcing the new feature, the online music giant noted that the feature, available only to paying subscribers, will allow the user to save much-needed Internet bandwidth.
As such, he pointed out, it may also be of help in the many homes in which Internet connections have been affected by more than one person telecommuting during the pandemic.
This frugal alternative to “streaming” has long joined practices such as cycling to work or reusing cardboard coffee cups on the list of measures that consumers are asked to help reduce emissions. greenhouse.
According to studies by teams of researchers, the growing popularity of online music has a harmful impact on the environment.
While the shift to streaming has reduced plastic waste from CDs, the impact of music downloads on carbon dioxide emissions is also detrimental.
Researchers from the University of Glasgow, in the United Kingdom, and the University of Oslo, in Norway, found in 2019 that, while both music prices and plastic waste have decreased, the industry’s CO2 emissions musical have skyrocketed.
Scientists argue that the shift toward streaming music online from smartphones and computers has resulted in far more streams than at any previous time in music history.
Spotify announced that its new feature, supplied with a design update to the desktop application and the web player, will be available to all users in the coming weeks.
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INTERNET
Press release
Study on carbon emissions from the music industry (2019)
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dpa
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