Ecosia, an alternative to Google, will plant three million trees in Brazil it’s CEO told Metro.co.uk (Picture: Getty/AP/Ecosia)

A search engine that uses its advertising revenue to fund the planting of millions of trees has seen a 1,000% surge in users during the Amazon rainforest fires.

Ecosia said they had ‘mixed feelings’ about their growing popularity as ordinary people look at how they can help the stricken areas of Brazil.

Scientists have recorded nearly 80,000 forest fires in the Latin American country since the start of the year.

Global leaders have called the deliberate burning an ‘international crisis’ but Brazil’s far-right leader Jair Bolsonaro has rejected offers of help.


Residents of a Tijuca neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil take part in a reforestation project (Picture: Ecosia)

An aerial view of deforestation in the Western Amazon region of Brazil (Picture: AFP)

As fears grow, internet users are increasingly rushing to use Ecosia as an alternative to the search engine Google.



To date, the organisation has planted over 65 million trees worldwide and today they revealed to Metro.co.uk they will plant three million more in fire-ravaged Brazil.

Chief executive Christian Kroll told Metro.co.uk said: ‘Our objective is to reforest the planet and counter a lot of the environmental destruction we see.

‘We are deeply saddened by what is happening in Brazil and so many people are now asking what they can do to help the rainforest.

‘Because of that, we have had a huge influx of users in the last week. That is great for us and great for the planet because it needs many many more trees.

‘But the reasons why we are getting this attention is sad, so there are mixed feelings.’

The search engine is a growing alternative to Google (Picture: Ecosia)

A tract of Amazon jungle is deliberately burnt (Picture: Reuters)

Ecosia, a non-profit organisation, operates like its rival Google, although it has partnered with Microsoft for its search algorithms.

Its search app can be downloaded or a browser extension installed that makes it the default search engine.

Ecosia said that, unlike Google, all searches are anonymous and the history is deleted after four days.

Mr Kroll said that before the rainforest fires, the search engine – which is powered by solar energy – saw about 20,000 installations per day.

That has now soared to over 200,000 in the last week.

It was recently the top ranked iOS app in Brazil and the firm are lobbying the German government to change their default setting from Google to Ecosia.

What Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro thinks about the rainforest fires Environmentalists blame Brazil’s president Jair Bolsonaro, a climate change sceptic, for the sharp increase in deforestation. He came to power in January promising to open up the Amazon rainforest to farming and mining and his rhetoric is said to have emboldened farmers to burn large swathes of the area for beef and soy production. Miners and loggers are also accused of deliberately starting fires to illegally deforest land. Conservationists are said to have been attacked for trying to do their jobs with land owners feeling ‘empowered’ to deforest protected land without any fear of consequences. The fires have been raging for around a month and an area the size of a football pitch is said to be lost every minute. The G7 club pledged to donate $22 million (£18 million) on sending firefighting aircraft to douse the infernos. But Mr Bolsanaro rejected that after becoming involved in personal spat with French President Emmanuel Macron. Relations between Europe and Brazil are already low and there are now warnings the EU will not do trade deals with the region until the fires are out.

The Amazon is also home to one million indigenous people whose homes are being destroyed (Picture: Reuters)

Berlin-based Ecosia donates most of its revenue to reforestation projects and a tree is planted every 0.8 seconds.

The organisation works in conjunction with local conservation groups, who pay workers a fair wage to plant and maintain indigenous forests on community land.

Mr Kroll said that one of Ecosia’s 20 worldwide projects was the Atlantic Forest on Brazil’s east coast, around 2,500 miles from the Amazon.

In the past three years, they have planted 2.2 million trees there and will now add three million more to link up existing forests.

CEO Christian Kroll said he had mixed feelings about the surge in popularity (Picture: Ecosia)

The Brazilian government has rejected offers of help to tackle the fires (Picture: AP)

A recent report by Swiss scientists said a trillion trees needed to be planted in order to combat climate change.

Mr Kroll said this would be possible over the next few decades ‘for less than 1% of the global military budget’.



He added: ‘It is not much money but somehow it just isn’t happening.’

The six nations with the most room for new trees are Russia, the United States, Canada, Australia, Brazil and China.