He said Atlassian would also bring forward its net zero goal from 2050 to 2040.
Mr Cannon-Brooks said he believed that the 2050 net zero target locked in by most developed economies and preferred by the Australian government was already a “done deal”,and that ambitious 2030 targets were now far more important.
He has not yet decided where to direct the funds but said the $1 billion-odd he has already put into clean economy ventures before this new pledge indicated the sort of projects the couple may back.
Mr Cannon-Brookes and Andrew “Twiggy” Forest are lead investors in the $20 billion Sun Cable project,which plans to sell solar power to Singapore via a cable from what would be the world’s largest solar farm in the Northern Territory,as well as ventures to make solar cells cheaper and more efficient.
To deepen its emissions cuts Atlassian,a software giant,has already met a target to shift to 100 per cent renewable energy by 2025. It plans to make its data-centres more efficient,reduce business travel and develop more efficient buildings for its staff around the world.
“COP26 is obviously an incredibly important moment in the history of humanity,and it’s all about countries,governments,businesses and individuals coming together trying to solve this huge problem,” he said.