Repair Your Carbon Footprint

We all make our mark — and we can help clean it up.

In today’s world, just being human means creating carbon emissions. Even with the best intentions, it’s nearly impossible to reduce your footprint by more than 10–20%. That’s not failure — it’s just reality.
But here’s the good news:
You can repair what’s left of your carbon footprint by supporting trusted projects that are actively removing carbon from the atmosphere — or preventing it from being released in the first place.

Even Small Contributions Go A Long Way

Just $0.50 a day (around $15/month) can fund meaningful climate solutions that really work.

Climate Projects Worth Supporting

These organizations are doing high-integrity, science-backed work to remove or avoid emissions. We’ve vetted them, and we believe your money will be well spent here:

Cool Effect

Connects individuals with scientifically validated carbon reduction projects, such as clean cookstove initiatives and methane capture, ensuring transparency and effectiveness.

Terrapass

Offers verified carbon offsets that support clean energy, landfill gas capture, and forest conservation.

Atmosfair

Specializes in climate protection projects that offset emissions from air travel and support clean energy worldwide.

The Nature Conservancy

Protects and restores natural carbon sinks like forests, wetlands, and grasslands.

Carbon180

Advocates for and supports carbon removal strategies like soil carbon storage, reforestation, and direct air capture.

One Tree Planted

Makes it easy to support reforestation by planting one tree for every dollar donated.

Forest Carbon Partnership

Supports large-scale forest conservation efforts in developing countries.

South Pole

Develops and manages carbon offset projects focused on renewable energy, forest protection, and sustainable agriculture.

Going BETTER Than Net Zero

Not everyone is in a position to offset their emissions — and that’s just the truth. Millions of people around the world are focused on meeting basic needs, not calculating their carbon footprint. But the climate crisis affects all of us, and we’re all in it together.
If you’re in a place where you can give a little more — say $1 or $1.50 per day — you can help cover the cost for someone else who can’t. It’s a small act with a big ripple effect.

That’s how we build something better than Net Zero:

a global community that shares the load and repairs the damage we’ve all inherited — together.