Search engine plants trees and
finds results
Some
people prefer Google when exploring the Web. Some like Yahoo or Bing. But now
more than 2.5 million people a month are using Ecosia, because every time they
click “Search” they help plant a tree.
Ecosia
donates an impressive 80 per cent of its income, after expenses, to programs
that sow trees in Africa. The money, up to $75,000 a month (most of it from
ads), is responsible for four new trees every minute, according to Ecosia
spokesperson Jacey Bingler.
Spreading
greenery projects in Africa
The
group, based in Germany, had been funding a tree program in Brazil but last
October it began financing WeForest’s reforestation project in Burkina Faso,
West Africa.
It
is part of a larger effort to spread greenery across dry regions of Africa.
Bingler noted that the project has a larger purpose, too. “It’s about reviving
drought-ravaged landscapes, nurturing, educating and empowering people, slowing
the spread of disease and even reducing the likelihood of extremism and violent
conflict.”
Ecosia’s
goal is to sprout 1 billion trees by 2020. Originally it hoped to reach that
level by this year, but planting costs were high and users did not quickly
flock to the search engine.
Rapid
progress
That
is all picking up steam today. “We celebrated our first million trees in
November 2014, the second million already in May 2015,” Bingler noted. And the
cost in Burkina Faso works out to about 30 cents a tree, instead of the dollar
being spent before.
Bingler
noted that the search engine continues to improve; searches are now 34 per cent
faster than they were last year. It is powered primarily by Bing and is
enhanced with Ecosia’s own algorithms and technologies. Users can also click a
“Google” button, which gives that engine’s results for the same inquiry.
Bingler
added that Ecosia is an important alternative to the big players “because it
empowers users to do good without spending a penny. Highly abstract everyday
tasks, like searching the Web, can lead to something as tangible as a new
tree.”
Source | Asian
Age | 28 July 2015
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