
The Ecosia Podcast
1) The radio show that plants trees
Ecosia is growing trees in Malawi – using radio! And without putting a single sapling in the ground.
2) Why online privacy matters and how to protect it
Welcome, stranger! This episode explores why privacy matters, what privacy has to do with the environment and your mental health, and how Ecosia is handling your data.
3) A botanical adventure, with Jonathan Drori
Jonathan Drori has written a book – or love letter – about trees. In this episode, we talk to him about his ongoing fascination.
4) An Ecosia developer goes to Brazil
Jéssica, a Brazilian software developer at Ecosia, visits our reforestation project in her home country. Her climate anxiety is transformed.
5) Trees for Australia
All profits made from our searches on Thursday will plant trees in Australia! The Byron Bay area needs its rainforests back for protection against future fires.
6) How to cope with climate anxiety
We are constantly confronted with the reality of climate change, and this has an effect on our mental health. We talk to psychotherapist Rosemary Randall about what climate anxiety is and how we might...Show More
7) Why forest restoration is the top climate change solution
We used to lack a basic understanding of how many trees our planet could potentially support. No more: the Crowther Lab's research shows that we could plant 1.6 billion additional hectares of tree cov...Show More
8) Food and the desert: sounds from our project in Andalusia, Spain
This episode of the Ecosia podcast explores our Spanish tree-planting project through interviews, a personal story about going home, and a polyphony of sounds and instruments recorded at our reforesta...Show More
9) How to bring forests back without planting trees
Alternative Nobel Prize laureate Tony Rinaudo explains how to bring forests back through Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration -- an innovative reforestation technique that is changing landscapes and li...Show More
10) Trees not profits
Our profits go towards trees, not shareholders – and we’ve just made that commitment legally binding.