A climate charity since 2014
We put forests back where they were taken.
We're a small climate charity with one job: bring living forest back to land that lost it. We work in seven landscapes with the people who live there, and we stay for ten years to make sure the trees we plant are still standing.
- 3.8M
- native trees planted
- 412kt
- CO₂ drawn down
- 1,240
- local jobs supported
Why forests
Every minute, the planet loses forest the size of forty football pitches.
Clearing forest releases more carbon than every car, plane and ship combined. The difference is that we already know how to undo it. Plant native trees. Protect what grows back. Stay long enough to be sure it holds.
10M hectares of forest lost in 2024
Where we work
Seven landscapes, one connected effort.
From the Amazon to Cascadia, we work with the people who already live on the land. We fund the local nurseries and pay proper wages. What regrows, we help protect. Every site reports real numbers back to this map, not estimates.
- 01 Amazon Basin 3.4°S 62.2°W
- 02 Congo Basin 1.0°S 23.6°E
- 03 Borneo 0.9°N 114.0°E
- 04 Western Ghats 13.5°N 75.3°E
- 05 Madagascar 18.9°S 46.4°E
- 06 Kenya Highlands 0.0°N 37.0°E
- 07 Cascadia 47.5°N 121.8°W
How we work
We plant. Then we stay.
Planting is the easy part. Survival is the work. We watch every site for ten years, with community rangers on the ground and satellite checks from above, so the canopy you paid for is still standing a decade from now.
3.8M native trees in the ground
Our impact
Carbon we measured, not bought.
An independent team confirmed the carbon locked into our 2025 projects by measuring the biomass on protected, community-owned land. No credits bought off a spreadsheet. Just trees doing the work, counted properly.
- 3.8M
- native trees planted
- 412kt
- CO₂ drawn down
- 7
- restoration landscapes
- 1,240
- local jobs supported
Latest news
All news →-
Beavers moved into the creek we replanted
Four years after we put willow and alder back along Coldspring Creek, a beaver pair built a dam there. Nobody released them. They walked in.
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Half a million mangrove propagules went in before the rains
The Sahy cooperative planted 520,000 mangrove propagules along the Mahajamba estuary in eleven days, beating the wet season by a week.
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A frog we hadn't recorded since 2009 turned up in a survey
A night survey in the Kodagu buffer forest found a Resplendent Shrub Frog, a species last seen in the area in 2009. It was sitting on a sapling we planted in 2021.
Support the work
Help us plant the next million.
Every gift goes to a named landscape and gets checked on the ground. Once the trees are in, we send you the satellite image. All public donations go to restoration. Our running costs are paid for separately.
- Tracked to a real project site
- Verified on the ground every year
- Cancel a monthly gift whenever you like