Diaspora climate action
A free vote, alongside your remittance — not instead of it.
GreenSweep is a free voting platform for diaspora communities. You do not redirect a single unit of the money you send home; instead, alongside your remittance, you cast a free vote that tells outside donors which environmental projects in your home country to fund next. Ten priority communities are live: Filipino (OFW), Bangladeshi and Nepali workers in the Gulf, Indian (NRI), Indonesian (PMI), Pakistani, Nigerian, Mexican-American, Salvadoran, and Ghanaian. Sign up below, choose your community, and tell us how visible you want to be — anonymous notify, counted in a public vote, or named on community pages.
Priority communities
Overseas Filipino Workers
Home country: PH
Bangladeshi workers in the Gulf
Home country: BD
Nepali workers in the Gulf
Home country: NP
Non-Resident Indians
Home country: IN
Pekerja Migran Indonesia
Home country: ID
Pakistani diaspora
Home country: PK
Nigerian diaspora
Home country: NG
Mexican-American community
Home country: MX
Salvadoran diaspora
Home country: SV
Ghanaian diaspora
Home country: GH
Per-community hub pages are landing as native-speaker review completes.
Cities of work
Many supporters live in one country and send remittances to another. The city-of-work hubs explain how diaspora work in 24 priority cities routes outside funding to environmental projects in the home countries listed there.
Join a community
Tell your group
Frequently asked questions
Does GreenSweep replace my remittance?
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No. GreenSweep is free and additive. The vote you cast does not redirect a single peso, taka, rupee, or dollar of the money you send home. It signals where outside donors should direct their funding for environmental projects in your home country.
Who actually pays for the projects, then?
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Outside funders -- corporate sustainability budgets, matched-funding sponsors, and platform advertising revenue. The diaspora vote tells them where to send the money. The diaspora wallet stays closed.
Why focus on diaspora communities?
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Two reasons. First, diaspora communities are the most reliable long-term source of household resilience for the regions most exposed to climate risk. Second, they have the strongest incentive to push outside funding toward projects in those same regions, because the families they support are the ones who live with the outcomes.
Is this an MLM, a recruiting funnel, or a donation appeal?
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None of those. There is no payout, no upline, no donation. It is a free vote and an opt-in to be told when projects from your community get funded. The signup form lets you choose how visible you want to be.
What about the Philippines and India donate flow?
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Diaspora info and signup is available globally. The active donate flow currently refuses Philippines and India until a local entity (a Philippine foundation and an FCRA-registered Indian beneficiary) is in place. Voting and signup are unaffected.
Sources
Looking for a specific goal? The 1 billion supporters page explains why this works without a billionaire.