Ecosia

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Ecosia
Ecosia logo
Type of site
Search engine
Available inEnglish and 27 other languages
CEO
Revenue19.1M€ (2019)[1]
URLecosia.org
CommercialYes
Users15,000,000[2][3]
Launched7 December 2009; 11 years ago (2009-12-07)
Current statusActive

Ecosia is a search engine based in Berlin, Germany. It donates 80% of its profits to nonprofit organizations that focus on reforestation. It considers itself a social business, is CO2-negative and claims to support full financial transparency and protect the privacy of its users.[4][5] Ecosia is also B Lab certified.

As of September 2021, the company claims to have planted more than 132 million trees since its inception.[6]

Search engine[]

At launch, the search engine originally provided a combination of search results from Yahoo! and technologies from Bing and Wikipedia. Ads were delivered by Yahoo! as part of the revenue sharing agreement with the company.[7]

Ecosia's search results have been provided by Bing since 2017,[8] and enhanced by the company's own algorithms.[5] It is currently available as a web browser extension or as a mobile app on Android and iOS devices.[6][9]

In 2018, Ecosia committed to becoming a privacy-friendly search engine. Searches are encrypted and not stored permanently, and data is not sold to third-party advertisers. The company states in its privacy policy that it does not create personal profiles based on search history, nor does it use external tracking tools like Google Analytics.[10]

Every 60 seconds, Ecosia users conduct over 10,000 searches.[11] Ecosia shows advertisements next to its search results and is paid by partners every time a user is directed to an advertiser via a sponsored link. A single search on Ecosia raises approximately half a Euro cent (0.005 EUR) on average, according to Ecosia's FAQ,[12] taking about 0.22 euro (€)[12] or, as of August 2021, 1.3 seconds to plant a tree.[2]

Ecosia has become the default search engine at a rising number of European colleges, including Glasgow, Leeds, and Sussex in Great Britain[11] and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in the Netherlands.[13]

Business model[]

Christian Kroll (2019), founder of Ecosia

Ecosia uses 80% of its profits (47.1% of its income) from advertising revenue to support tree planting projects.[14][15][16] The rest is put into backup reserves for unforeseen circumstances – if these reserves are not used they are channeled back into the company's tree planting fund. The company publishes monthly financial reports on its website.[17] In October 2018, founder Christian Kroll announced that he has given part of his shares over to the Purpose Foundation.[18] As a result, Kroll and Ecosia co-owner Tim Schumacher gave up their right to sell Ecosia or take any profits out of the company.[19][20]

In a May 2021 Handelsblatt article, example figures from March showed revenues of €1,969,440, while the largest expenditure was "Trees" at €789,113, ahead of the second-largest expenditure, operating costs, at €543,425. Users entering a keyword in Ecosia see essentially the same results as via Bing, including the ads. When someone clicks on an ad in Ecosia, Microsoft earns money, according to Kroll, but Ecosia gets a large portion of the sales. Kroll told Handelsblatt he's not allowed to reveal the exact percentage. The €789,113 expenditure for March 2021 amounted to 80% of that month's would-be profits.[21]

The cooperation between Ecosia and Microsoft benefits both companies: Microsoft makes a small profit via Ecosia, which presumably takes customers away from Google, and Ecosia can keep its investment in infrastructure small through the use of Bing's existing implementation. In March 2021, the 82-person company spent only €73,000 for servers and software, compared with €381,000 for its personnel costs.[21]

In April 2021, Ecosia handled 0.4% of European search requests, behind DuckDuckGo at 0.5%, Bing with 2.9%, and Google enjoying 93.2% of the market.[21]

Ecosia Travel[]

Ecosia Travel is a hotel search engine, implemented in partnership with HotelsCombined. The number of trees planted depends on the value of the booking. Ecosia Travel uses 100% of its earnings to plant an average of 26 trees for each hotel room booked through the company.[22][23][24]

Investments[]

In October 2020 Ecosia announced that they had bought a 20% stake in the debit card company .[25][26] The new debit card is planned to be launched in the year 2021 in partnership with Mastercard.[27]

The debit cards produced by TreeCard are made of British cherry wood instead of plastics as is customary for many other debit cards because plastic takes a much longer time to decompose when discarded.[26][27] 80% of the company's profits are planned to go to Ecosia's global reforestation projects.[26] It is estimated that every $60 (or £45)[27] spent will plant one tree.[26] There will be an option to only have the digital card using the online payment services Apple Pay, Google Pay, and Samsung Pay.[28][26]

History[]

Ecosia was launched on 7 December 2009 to coincide with UN climate talks in Copenhagen.[29] Over time, Ecosia has supported various tree-planting programs. Until December 2010, Ecosia's funds went to a program by WWF Germany that protected the Juruena National Park in the Amazon basin. To protect this area, the organizers drew up and financed plans with timber companies and the local communities.[30]

In 2011, the search engine had raised over €250,000.[31]

From July 2013 to September 2014, Ecosia donated to the Plant a Billion Trees program run by The Nature Conservancy, a program that aimed to restore the Brazilian Atlantic Forest by planting one million native trees by 2015.[32]

In 2015, Ecosia began funding reforestation in Burkina Faso as part of the Great Green Wall project, backed by the African Union and the World Bank, that aims to prevent desertification.

According to Ecosia, by 2015, the search engine had almost 2.5 million active users and had planted more than 2 million trees.

In May 2015, Ecosia was shortlisted for The Europas, the European Tech Startups Awards, under the category Best European Startup Aimed At Improving Society.[33]

In 2015, a blog post on the company's site announced their intention of planting one billion trees by the year 2020, calling the idea 'ambitious' but worthwhile.[34] Ecosia ended up meeting only 10–12% of this goal by 2020's end.[35]

Ecosia's servers have been running on 100% renewable energy since 2018. They have been expanding their solar energy plant to cope with the increasing numbers of users on their search platform.[36]

On 9 October 2018, Ecosia offered €1 million to buy the Hambach Forest from German energy company RWE AG to save it from being cut down for lignite mining.[37] RWE declined the offer.[38]

On 23 January 2020, following the 2019–20 Australian bushfire season, Ecosia donated all of its profits from that day to ReForest Now, a local NGO that not only plans to restore the forests, but also "make the area more resilient against future fires".[39] They stated that the profits were used to plant 26,446 trees.[40][41]

On 3 June 2021, Ecosia announced Ecosia Trees, a service allowing other companies to buy trees at 1�� each that Ecosia would then plant and maintain.[42][43][44] These reforestation efforts would be focused on Brazil and Burkina Faso.[42] While such efforts can benefit the ecosystems where the trees are planted, botanists have warned that if such reforestation efforts are badly managed that they can harm the environment more than benefit it.[42]

Impact[]

The company works with multiple organizations, such as the Eden Reforestation Projects, Hommes et Terre, and various local partners, to plant trees in 16 countries throughout the world.[45][46] Ecosia currently has one or more projects in the following countries: Peru, Nicaragua, Colombia, Haiti, Brazil, Morocco, Spain, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Madagascar, Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Kenya, Indonesia, India, Ivory Coast, United Kingdom, Canada, Rwanda, Bolivia, United States, Australia, Malawi.[47]

By July 2020, Ecosia had surpassed 100 million trees planted in total, resulting in over 50,000 metric tonnes of CO2 being removed from the atmosphere each month.[48][49][50][51] It was reported in the same month that Ecosia, on average, was able to fund a tree every 0.8 seconds – averaging 75 per minute or 108,000 per day – with the revenue it makes from advertising.[50]

Ecosia has stressed that it is not only carbon-neutral, but carbon-negative. Combining its tree-planting initiative with investment in solar energy to power its servers (running on "200% renewable energy"[3]), each search is said to remove 1 kg of CO2 from the atmosphere.[3][52]

Ecosia has been a certified B Corporation since April 2014.[53][54] According to B Lab, the organisation which certifies B Corporations based on areas such as employees, communities, and the environment, as of August 2021, "in donating 80 percent of its ad revenue, the search engine has raised almost $3 million for reforestation projects since its founding in December 2009".[53] The company's B-Impact Score was 113.4 on a scale from 0 to 200, an improvement over 2014 and 2016's scores of around 98.[53]

An article in Ethical Consumer examined Ecosia and its relation to it search provider, Bing. Giving Ecosia an "Ethiscore" of 11, in contrast to Google (5.5) and Microsoft Bing (6.5), Ethical Consumer found Ecosia to be superior to the other search engine companies it looked at, but marked it down in seven categories for its relationship with Microsoft (the lowest scorer in those categories).[55] Ethical Consumer made a point of clarifying that it's not the actual searches which lead to tree planting, but the click-through of search engine users to the ads, and called for improved transparency concerning its relationship with Microsoft Bing.[55]

One transparency measure taken by Ecosia is the publishing of its monthly business reports on its website, with a six-week delay.[56][57]

Browser integration[]

Ecosia is available on Google Chrome,[14] Firefox,[15] Safari,[58] Microsoft Edge,[59] and other browsers as a default search engine by downloading the extension from the Chrome web store or Mozilla's Addon site respectively.

With the release of version 26 (on 26 January 2016), the Pale Moon web browser added Ecosia as a default, as did version 8 of the Polarity web browser on 15 February 2016.[60] Ecosia is the default search engine of the Waterfox web browser since version 44.0.2.[61] Since version 1.9, Vivaldi has included Ecosia as a default search engine option.[62] In March 2018, Firefox 59.0 added Ecosia as a search engine option for the German version.[63][64]

On 12 August 2019, Ecosia announced that it would not participate in the "search-choice" auction to appear on Android devices led by Google.[5] This meant that in 2020 European Android phone users did not have the option to set Ecosia as a default search engine. Christian Kroll explained the boycott decision saying: "We're deeply disappointed that Google has decided to exploit its dominant market position in this way. Instead of giving wide and fair access, Google has chosen to give discrimination a different form and make everyone else but themselves pay, which isn't something we can accept".[5]

As of 12 March 2020, Ecosia was included as a default search engine option for Google Chrome in 47 markets, the first time a not-for-profit search engine appeared as a choice to users.[65] On 14 December 2020, Apple's Safari web browser added Ecosia as a search engine option in macOS Big Sur 11.1 and iOS/iPadOS 14.3.[66] On 28 January 2021, Ecosia became an official search engine on the Brave browser as a result of a partnership announced on that date by both companies.[67][68]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Ecosia business reports/Financial Reports & Tree Planting Receipts". Dropmark. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "What is Ecosia?". info.ecosia.org.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c Kelly, Ross (8 April 2021). "How Ecosia is helping tackle climate change, one click at a time". Digit. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  4. ^ "Search Engines Won't Support Google's Auction". PYMNTS.com. What's Next Media and Analytics. 12 August 2019. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Oates, John (12 August 2019). "Green search engine Ecosia thinks Google's Android auction stinks, gives bid a hard pass". The Register. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b "Ecosia is the search engine that plants trees". info.ecosia.org. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  7. ^ jlo (12 September 2014). "Ecosia: Eine Suchmaschine möchte den Regenwald retten" [A search engine wants to save the rain forest]. Sueddeutsche.de (in German).
  8. ^ "Where do Ecosia's search results come from?". Ecosia Knowledge Base. Archived from the original on 23 September 2017. Retrieved 19 November 2018.
  9. ^ "Download Ecosia for your mobile". info.ecosia.org. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  10. ^ "We protect your privacy". info.ecosia.org.
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b Farmbrough, Heather. "How The World's Largest Green Search Engine Is Fighting Climate Change". Forbes. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b "How does Ecosia make money?". Ecosia's FAQ. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  13. ^ "Ecosia". Green Office. 28 April 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2021.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b De Andrado, Mahesh (12 May 2019). "Search online and plant a tree with Ecosia". The Sunday Times Sri Lanka. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b "Ecosia — The search engine that plants trees