A curated list of awesome companies and resources fighting climate change through clean technology.
Awesome Clean Tech is a community-curated list of companies and organizations that develop clean technology solutions to combat climate change. It categorizes innovative businesses across sectors like agriculture, energy, materials, and water, providing brief profiles for each. The project serves as a discovery hub for sustainable technologies and environmental initiatives.
Entrepreneurs, investors, researchers, and environmentally conscious individuals seeking to explore or support companies working on climate solutions. It's also useful for developers and professionals looking for career opportunities in the sustainability sector.
It offers a centralized, well-organized directory of clean tech companies that is continuously updated by the community. Unlike generic lists, it focuses specifically on environmental impact and includes diverse global initiatives, making it a trusted resource for discovering actionable climate solutions.
A community curated list of awesome clean tech companies
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Companies are organized into clear sectors like Agriculture, Energy, and Water, making it easy to navigate by interest, as shown in the structured README with dedicated sections.
Features organizations from over 20 countries, including examples from Pakistan, India, and Sweden, highlighting diverse international efforts in sustainability.
Open for contributions via pull requests, allowing the list to evolve and stay current with new innovations, though this depends on active participation.
Includes hubs like Clean Tech Sweden, venture funds such as Breakthrough Energy Ventures, and research organizations, providing broader context beyond company listings.
Relies on community pull requests for updates, which can lead to outdated information or slow addition of new companies, as acknowledged in the contribution guidelines.
Entries are brief with only basic details like location and founding year, lacking in-depth analysis, verification, or performance data for each company.
The project does not independently verify the sustainability claims made by listed companies, potentially including greenwashing without scrutiny, as noted in the README's reliance on external sources.