333,000 acres saved so far
Protecting rainforests with Cool Earth Action - Keeping carbon where it belongs
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New initiative

Become a Cool School and sponsor an acre of endangered rainforest or get a business to help you do it and make your community more carbon positive.

Gasping for air

We need the rainforest to breathe. They are the lungs of the world and generate as much as a quarter of the world's oxygen.

Medicine cabinet of the world

Tropical rainforests have been the source of many life-saving drugs including two-thirds of cancer drugs. Future cures will depend on forest conservation.

Rainforests water our lawns

As well as breathing out oxygen, rainforests drive global weather patterns by transpiring water into clouds. No rainforests, no rain.

Where the wild things are

Rainforests are biodiversity hotspots. A small patch of forest can contain as many as 1,500 flowering plants and 750 species of tree.

Just one lost acre can wipe out a species

Losing forest means losing irreplaceable species. Every day, 35 species become extinct because of tropical deforestation.

Two lost acres by the time you read this

The world's rainforest took thousands of years to grow. But every second, an acre of rainforest is destroyed.

Protect rainforest: Tackle Climate Change

Trees breathe in carbon dioxide and breathe out oxygen. Carbon stored in their wood cannot contribute to global warming.

Once it's gone, it's gone

Once rainforest is cleared and the soil lost, the land usually turns into savannah which is unable to support more than grasses.

Rainforest communities are the best protectors

The best way to protect rainforest is to make sure local people are in control. Cool Earth funds rainforest communities to protect forest.

Help communities earn more from standing forest

How do local communities earn a living from protected rainforest? Rubber tapping is a traditional income source that needs conserved forest.

The finest coffee beans need rainforest

South America is the largest coffee producer. It is traditionally grown in the shade of other trees so it depends on other rainforest species.

The fruits of pristine forest

Brazil nuts only come from mature, pristine rainforest. Only certain bee species can pollinate them so they cannot be grown in plantations.

Rainforest jewel box

One of the key trade-goods of the Ashaninka people in Peru is beautiful jewellery that Cool Earth helps sell to fund conservation.

Rainforest news

Cool Earth is the leading source of rainforest news - from communities to coffee and from chocolate to carbon.

How can I make a difference?

Sponsoring rainforest with Cool Earth is a unique way to tackle climate change, and with Google Maps you can even see where your money is going.

Rainforest facts

Rainforest inventory. Even though they only 2% of the Earth's surface area, rainforests are home to 50% of plants and animals.

Teachers

Schools' Rainforest Resource Library

Download presentations of amazing rainforest images for your lessons. Plus use our resources designed by teachers from across the globe who took part in the Cool Earth Teacher Fellowship 2009. Resources

Cool Earth Teacher Fellowship

How do you bring a subject as remote and exotic as rainforests into the classroom? Well there are many ways of doing it but Cool Earth facilitates teachers in this essential aim by getting them to experience jungle life through the Cool Earth Teacher Fellowship. Learn more

Experience the Peruvian jungle. Cool Earth Teacher Fellowship 2009

Cool Earth Fellowship teachers providing you with specialist resources.

Dan Roberts

Dan Roberts in the rain in Peru Dan Roberts is an Assistant Headteacher at Saltash.net Community School in Cornwall who specialises in science. Hear what inspired his latest lesson plan.
Learn more

Emily Courtier

Emily Courtier smiling in front of peruvian mountainsEmily Courtier teaches Citizenship and Personal Social Health & Education at Sheldon School in Chippenham. Hear about her rainforest experiences. Learn more

Clover Hicks

Clover Lake HicksClover Lake Hicks teaches biology at the Salk School of Science in New York. Watch Clover experience the many uses of rainforest plants. Learn more

Matthias Zehner

Matt ZehnerMatthias Zehner, teaches history at Branham High School at San Jose in California. Watch Matthias' insights into hunting in the rainforest. Learn more

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