Security implications of digitalization: The dangers of data colonialism and the way towards sustainable and sovereign management of environmental data
Matthias St\"urmer, Jasmin Nussbaumer, Pascal St\"ockli

TL;DR
This paper examines the risks of data colonialism in digital environmental data management, highlighting how private tech companies' control threatens sovereignty and proposing solutions for sustainable governance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework analyzing data colonialism's risks and offers strategies for governments to ensure sustainable and sovereign management of environmental data.
Findings
Big tech companies hold enormous market power over environmental data.
Data colonialism risks threaten national sovereignty and environmental governance.
Proposed solutions include regulatory and multilateral approaches.
Abstract
Digitalization opens up new opportunities in the collection, analysis, and presentation of data which can contribute to the achievement of the 2030 Agenda and its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). In particular, the access to and control of environmental and geospatial data is fundamental to identify and understand global issues and trends. Also immediate crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrate the importance of accurate health data such as infection statistics and the relevance of digital tools like video conferencing platforms. However, today much of the data is collected and processed by private actors. Thus, governments and researchers depend on data platforms and proprietary systems of big tech companies such as Google or Microsoft. The market capitalization of the seven largest US and Chinese big tech companies has grown to 8.7tn USD in recent years, about twice the…
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