We’ve updated your personal tree counter to make it even easier for you to keep track of your impact on Ecosia.
Protests, especially unpopular ones, can look like failures in the short-term. But evidence suggests that this isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
In this 36th tree update, we take you along on our tree monitoring trip in Madagascar. From the hilly south, across the dry north, to the muddy coast.
Dubbed the farm of the world, Brazil’s forests have been cleared mostly to satisfy worldwide meat consumption. Your trees here protect 60% of Brazil’s endangered species of animals and plants.
Dark mode has been your most requested feature — and for good reason. We’re very happy to announce it’s finally here.
We make it easier for you to be climate active while navigating the many claims made by governments and companies around the world.
What we can do is a series drawing inspiration from the changemakers of our time. Matthias Schmelzer is an activist-researcher on the topic of degrowth.
There’s hardly a place more vulnerable to climate change than northern Burkina Faso. Planting trees here restores desertified land to its former fertility.
We’d like to share our perspective on what happened in Madagascar, what we learned, and what we’re doing now.
What our American tree-planting partners think about the new US Climate Bill.
Some forests were born to burn. To restore them, we need to protect them from bad fire and then carefully reintroduce good fire back onto the landscape.
In southern France, we are planting fire resistant native species around fire stations to shield them from future fires and raise awareness among local communities about wildfires and their causes.