Tag Archives: environment

sglosecosia

Council’s Web Searches Fund 3,600 Trees in 2 Years

In 2021 I wrote to South Gloucestershire council asking them to change their search engine to Ecosia on computers, phones and tablets owned and operated by the council. In January 2022 they did exactly that and have been quietly using Ecosia as their search engine ever since!

Yesterday, May 1st, a source at the council contacted me to thank me for my “nice idea” and shared with me some statistics about the council’s progress over the last 2 years. In that time, users of council-owned devices have searched using Ecosia over 170,000 times, funding the planting of an estimated 3,600 trees.

Ecosia reaches 200 million trees planted

Ecosia is a search engine launched in 2009. The company behind it uses advertising revenue to fund tree-planting projects around the world and hit a total of 200,000,000 trees planted back in February this year. Over the last 2 years searches on devices owned by South Gloucestershire Council have contributed an impressive 3,600 trees to that tally.

But why stop at one council? There are 317 councils across England alone, whose internet searches could be planting over 500,000 trees per year if they all follow the lead of South Gloucestershire. Why not write to our local councillor today and ask them to switch their devices to Ecosia?

On a personal note, as a member of the Green Party for over 10 years, this news represents a win for Green politics and proof that the Greens work hard to protect the environment even from the side-lines. With zero members of South Glos Council, one Green Party member managed to instigate a massively positive change in the way the council operates. I look forward to campaigning for more change on similar lines in future, and hope that one day some Greens will get elected to South Glos Council to have a bigger and more direct impact!

the unfortunate rise of yimbyism

The unfortunate rise of YIMBYism

Britain currently faces multiple crises in housing, energy, transport, the cost of living and healthcare – as well as the global threat of climate change. The scale of the challenge facing the next government is immense, investment in British infrastructure will need to increase drastically in the coming years to get this country back on its feet again.

Unfortunately the pressing need for action has driven mainstream politicians, especially in the Labour Party, into a dangerous and incurious mindset that can be summed up quite simply as: Build first, ask questions later.

They’ve even created an informal coalition of campaigners proudly wearing a new label: YIMBY. “Yes in my back yard, to anything, no questions asked,” while those who do ask important questions and oppose harmful developments are attacked as busybodies who want the UK to fail, rather than sensible voices ensuring Britain’s progress is safe and fair.

There’s an understandable sense of urgency behind YIMBY thinking. We don’t have much time to fix the UK’s crumbling infrastructure and broken economy – it’s making people miserable right now. So when a new property development, road or power station is proposed it’s only natural that there will be a clamour of supportive voices.

But we also know that a rush to support solutions without due care and attention creates the disasters of the future. Developers in the past were allowed, even encouraged, to use dangerous materials like asbestos, porous concrete and flammable cladding in thousands of buildings. People who raised concerns were dismissed then as they are dismissed now.

The Green Party, who launched their manifesto for the local elections last week, are often on the receiving end of criticism for asking inconvenient but important questions.

Their plans to ease the housing crisis by building 150,000 new council homes, bringing unused properties into residential use and introducing rent controls have been attacked by YIMBYs in lockstep with property developers and private landlords. Those who derive their wealth from property are more than happy to build unaffordable, low quality new homes in the wrong places as long as it means they can boost their profits.

Where the Green Party promises to exercise caution and pursue higher standards for future homes, the YIMBYs are desperate to write a blank cheque for the profiteers in the name of solving the housing crisis. Their folly now will simply create more crises in future.

The Greens recognise, rightly, that new homes must be built to tackle the housing crisis. But they must not be new homes at any cost to the environment. New homes whose tenants will be unhappy, unhealthy or charged extortionate rents.

Any credible plan to tackle the housing crisis must involve building new social housing, homes people can actually afford to buy, and the surrounding infrastructure to support new homeowners and tenants. New homes must be built not only with the housing crisis in mind – but also with an eye on climate change and biodiversity loss.

Long may there continue to be sensible voices in the room asking the right questions at the right time. We’ll be thanking them in future for making sure that the solutions to one crisis didn’t create more problems for our children & grandchildren.

Ecosia reaches 200 million trees planted

Eco-Friendly Search Engine Ecosia Plants 200 Million Trees

Tree-planting search engine Ecosia announced today they have reached a total of 200 million trees planted. The website, which launched in December 2009, has raised over 80 million euros for environmental causes.

Ecosia allows users to search the internet just like Google or Bing, but they use money they make from advertising to plant trees and invest in renewable energy.

Writing on the official Ecosia blog, CEO and founder Christian Kroll said:

With every search and every share, you have allowed us to do so much good for the planet, and we have no plans to stop here. If everyone reading this shared Ecosia with a friend, we could reach 300 million in no time.

Ecosia’s users can see an estimate of how many trees they have helped to plant with their web searches, which can be synced across web browsers, the Android app and the iPhone app.