Ekovilla recycles wastes from wooden building element companies into carbon-negative cellulose fiber insulation (CFI) for buildings and prolongs the storage of CO2 by 50 years.
The Douglas County biochar project uses waste products of the lumber mills in Oregon, United States to create biochar that stores CO2 for thousands of years.
The Rimba Raya Biodiversity REDD+ project in Indonesia preserves nearly 65,000 ha of tropical swamp forest that were originally slated to be converted into palm oil plantations.
Remove CO2 permanently and support Brazilian sugarcane farmers' use of rock powder as a natural fertilizer, thereby incentivizing a more sustainable form of agriculture.
The May Ranch project avoids the release of CO2 from the conversion of grasslands to agricultural land in Colorado, United States.
A family-run supermarket in rural New Jersey chose a natural refrigerant cooling system in place of cheaper, traditional, climate-damaging refrigeration.
This project's aim is to make Namibia the largest producer of biochar soil conditioner in Africa, directing carbon finance to impactful, scalable and credible climate action.