The Foundation That Can’t Change Its Mind
A Malta Purpose Foundation cannot amend its constitutional purpose, privatise, or redirect assets. GreenSweep's structure answers the question: what if you just take the money and run?
Ideas, stories, and analysis from the GreenSweep Foundation.
The GreenSweep blog publishes research, analysis, and explainers on environmental project finance, climate funding flows, and the economics of impact-driven giving. Articles are written by GreenSweep co-founders and reviewed contributors. Topics include how carbon credits are priced and verified under Gold Standard and Verra registries; why remittance corridors in the Philippines and Nigeria often carry higher per-dollar impact than Northern European giving; the mechanics of peatland and mangrove restoration; and why most CSR spending does not reach primary environmental beneficiaries. GreenSweep operates as a Malta Purpose Foundation under Chapter 16 of the Laws of Malta, with a statutory 70% revenue commitment to verified environmental projects. Posts cite peer-reviewed research, government data, and NGO verification reports. The blog is updated monthly. Each article includes an author bio, a publication date, and a list of cited sources.
A Malta Purpose Foundation cannot amend its constitutional purpose, privatise, or redirect assets. GreenSweep's structure answers the question: what if you just take the money and run?
From a finger on a screen to a root in the mud.
Follow one vote through the system: eleven euros of directed impact funds a patch of mangrove restoration that protects a coastline, sequesters carbon, supports fisheries, and compounds into a forest.
Most corporate sustainability reports measure inputs, not outcomes. The reporting frameworks are improving, but the gap between spend and impact persists.
Philanthropy beyond charity means funding pluralism and discovery, not just cheques. Stanford's Rob Reich and the online donation button, reconsidered.
Free to vote. The article you're reading was paid for by votes like yours.
Mangrove restoration is the highest-ROI environmental intervention available. $80B/year in coastal protection, 3–5x carbon sequestration. Here is the full case.
You already share data with platforms that monetise it without a thought. GreenSweep asks you to share it deliberately, in the best cause we know.
When a village gets clean water, the downstream effects cascade: child mortality drops, school attendance rises, agricultural productivity increases. This isn't charity — it's infrastructure.
How AI compresses the cost of running a foundation, and what it cannot replace.
AI doesn't replace judgment in charitable operations. It compresses the cost of functions that would otherwise require departments a small foundation cannot afford.
Free to vote. The article you're reading was paid for by votes like yours.
Environmental funding is a cooperation problem. GreenSweep's design borrows from Axelrod's iterated game theory to produce sustained collective action where one-time appeals don't.
Diaspora remittances exceed official development aid by 3x. They're faster, more accurate, and more responsive. GreenSweep asks these communities to redirect attention, not money.
IoT sensor fusion is transforming ecological restoration — but the data centres powering it consume as much water as 10 million Americans. GreenSweep invests in both sides of this equation.
The real problem with charitable accountability isn't overhead ratios — it's that the infrastructure of trust is expensive, retroactive, and often performative.
Free to vote. The article you're reading was paid for by votes like yours.
GreenSweep directs 70% of revenue to projects. Here's exactly what the other 30% covers — and why we're committed to shrinking it.
The communities that bear the worst of climate disruption have the least say in environmental funding. GreenSweep was built to change that.
“The best way to sustain anything is to make it a genuine pleasure.” — MFK Fisher
The attention economy climate problem, quantified: €700 billion of annual ad spend, a €4.1 trillion climate finance gap, and the architecture that redirects one toward the other.
We all get hammered with opportunities to plant trees. Gold Standard verification is how you know they're still alive in five years.
Free to vote. The article you're reading was paid for by votes like yours.
You tapped a button. Nothing left your wallet. But something just moved. Here's exactly what happens when you vote on GreenSweep.
GreenSweep is in the process of becoming a Malta Purpose Foundation, not a charity. Here's why that distinction matters for environmental accountability and long-term impact.
The blog publishes research, analysis, and explainers on environmental project finance, climate funding flows, and the economics of impact-driven giving. Topics include carbon credit pricing and verification under Gold Standard and Verra registries, remittance corridor impact efficiency, peatland and mangrove restoration mechanics, and why most CSR spending does not reach primary environmental beneficiaries.
Articles are listed in reverse publication order, with the most recent first. Each article shows its publication date, reading time, and category.
Articles are written by GreenSweep co-founders and reviewed contributors. Every article includes an author bio with name, role, and credentials, and a last-reviewed date.
GreenSweep articles cite government datasets, NGO verification reports, peer-reviewed research, and project registry data. Citations appear in a numbered sources section at the bottom of each article.
New articles are published monthly. The publication and last-reviewed dates on each article reflect when the content was written and when it was last verified.