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According to an article on TheConversation:

So which is the greener option? It depends on many things, including how many times you listen to your music. If you only listen to a track a couple of times, then streaming is the best option. If you listen repeatedly, a physical copy is best; streaming an album over the internet more than 27 times will likely use more energy than it takes to produce and manufacture the same CD.

Their source links to a report titled "The Dark Side Of The Tune: The Hidden Energy Cost Of Digital Music Consumption", but it's behind a paywall. Is this a reasonable estimate of the energy costs of streaming music?

JonathanReez
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    To compare like with like you would have to include the energy required to play the CD as well. – Paul Johnson Dec 22 '19 at 12:51
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    And manufacture the plastic hardcover and print the inlay and transport it to the distributor who transports it to the warehouse that ships it to your home. – pipe Dec 22 '19 at 13:47
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    @pipe there's also the fact that streaming usually uses caching so you would rarely download the same album over and over again. – JonathanReez Dec 22 '19 at 16:44
  • @pipe fair point but there's CD's in cardboard cases and small distributors might ship directly to you. All exceptions, I know, but still worth thinking about imo. – stijn Dec 22 '19 at 17:21
  • I misread the title as "Does streaming an album consume 27 times as much energy...?" and I suspect other people will also make this mistake. – user253751 Dec 23 '19 at 18:18
  • @pipe, but it's more likely that many more than 27 people would be streaming, so caching is moot. – NothingToSeeHere Dec 24 '19 at 12:43
  • @NothingToSeeHere caching is not moot because more than one person also want the CD. – Ryan_L Dec 26 '19 at 06:19
  • @ryan_l And each person is going stream it. So, who is caching it? Which of the possible thousands of listeners benefitted from someone caching it? Even if cached, that state is not permanent - caches dump less frequently used data in favor of something current. – NothingToSeeHere Dec 27 '19 at 13:11
  • @NothingToSeeHere if you listen to the song multiple times, it won't be redownloaded each time. But I don't have the stats on the median number of playbacks of the same song by a given user. – JonathanReez Dec 27 '19 at 19:18
  • @jonathanrees, are multiple plays by individuals user a signifigant concern here? Aren't the hundreds/thousands of unique plays a more valud data point? Also, how many streaming services allow client apps to cache content subject to royalties? The content providers want their fees. – NothingToSeeHere Dec 28 '19 at 20:09

1 Answers1

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The original research that produced this was done in a collaboration between the University of Glasgow and the University of Oslo, and UoG details it here. While the Glasgow part is available here, the part we are interested in is available here, but is $30.

From the summary, it looks like the comparison is between the cost to produce the plastic used in vinyl, CDs, cassettes, etc, for the peak year (when the format saw its largest annual sales) and the cost to store and transmit the streaming music. It appears that no accounting for population was made - so the fact that more people are around to listen to music today is not factored in to the increased pollution shown - i.e. environmental impact is not per play, but population wide.

Further, while the ecological cost for the streamed music accounts for all expenses from the servers it is stored on to the listener's ears, the cost of the physical distribution options only accounts for the production of the plastic (and maybe the actual "stamping" of the LP, CD, cassette), but does not include distribution or energy cost of playback.

And lastly, it appears that the article assumes that the energy being consumed is non-renewable. The environmental cost of producing plastic and manufacturing it into storage media is non-trivially polluting and while efforts are made to reduce that impact, it is so far not possible to reduce it in the same way that using renewable sources of electricity can reduce environmental impacts.

It is unclear where in the chain the cost of storing music for streaming begins - does it include manufacturing impact for CPUs and hard drives, etc, or only the operating costs of keeping them operational (including cooling)? Where does the cost end for manufacturing media? Bulk plastic production? Stamping? Transport? Playback? And where does it begin? Mining the petroleum? Does it include manufacture of the machines doing the stamping (which would be required for an apples to apples if they included the cost of manufacturing CPUs and hard drives)? These answers are only available in the $30 paperback book published by the author of this part of the study, which seems, well, a bit out of the ordinary, especially considering that the first half of the study provides it's methods and data freely. But the upshot is that without dropping $30 (or $16.19 for the Kindle edition), this is the best supported answer I can provide.

I'd also caution that the research's close association with Record Store Day should call into question the pro-physical media conclusions it draws.

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