Unhappy with the amount of money Google is making off of your searches? How about a search engine that promises to plant trees every time you search

That’s the idea behind Ecosia, an eco-friendly search engine that has vowed to spend its extra revenue on planting trees in Africa and elsewhere. It’s no small amount either: about 80 percent of the search engine’s revenue ends up being donated (about $50,000-80,000 per month) and the company has planted over three million trees since it launched six years ago — or about one tree every 12 seconds.

“The good cause we support could be something other than tree planting, but we’ve determined planting trees as a way of helping the environment and the people,” founder and CEO Christian Kroll told Digital Trends in an interview.

Ecosia is the brainchild of Kroll, who first launched the site back in 2009 after Kroll’s travels through Asia and South America. Originally Ecosia funded NGO projects in Nepal while Kroll spent time in the country, but the lack of stable Internet or electricity in the country caused him to scrap the idea. The site returned after Kroll’s time in South America, where he learned more about deforestation and its link to climate change.

“I combined my idea for a charitable search approach with tree planting,” he explains. “Ever since, Ecosia has supported different reforestation projects with its search ad revenue.”

Search results are powered by Bing, although the site provides a Google search button so that its users can compare search results. Ad revenues come through its exclusive partnership with Microsoft’s Bing Ads service. In the end, it’s a simple way to help the environment doing something millions of us do on a daily basis.

“I believe in the power of social business and smart tools like, for example, a tree planting search engine,” Kroll says. “We think that the future belongs to products that allow users to cater to their own needs and simultaneously do good without any additional costs or effort, simply by capitalizing on a daily habit.”

If saving the planet one query at a time sounds like something you’d like to do, head over to Ecosia.com to check it out, or just install the Chrome extension to make it your default search engine.

Related Posts

Talk to AI every day? New research says it might signal depression

This finding comes from a national survey of nearly 21,000 U.S. adults conducted in 2025, where participants detailed how often they interacted with generative AI tools and completed standard mental health questionnaires. Within that group, about 10% said they used AI daily, and 5% said they engaged with chatbots multiple times throughout the day. Those daily users showed higher rates of reported depressive symptoms and other negative emotional effects, such as anxiety and irritability.

You might actually be able to buy a Tesla robot in 2027

The comments follow a series of years-long development milestones. Optimus, which was originally unveiled as the Tesla Bot in 2021, has undergone multiple prototype iterations and has already been pressed into service handling simple tasks in Tesla factories. According to Musk, those internal deployments will expand in complexity later this year, helping prepare the robotics platform for broader use.

Blue Origin joins the satellite internet race with its 6 Tbps TeraWave network

According to the official announcement, Blue Origin plans to launch 5,280 low-Earth orbit satellites and 128 medium-Earth orbit satellites for the service, with the first ones set to deploy in late 2027. The low-Earth satellites will rely on RF connectivity and offer a max data transfer speed of 144 Gbps, while the medium-Earth satellites will use optical links to reach the publicized 6 Tbps speed. In comparison, SpaceX's Starlink maxes out at 400 Mbps at the moment, with future upgrades aiming for 1 Gbps.