Protecting the rainforest together
Redeem voucher code now
Get your square meters now!
Here you can personalize and download your certificate with the exact geo-coordinates of your square meters in the rainforest. You can also protect more forest if you wish.
Now it's your turn!
Rainforest has already been protected in your name. Would you like to do more? Help us save even more rainforest by making an additional donation.
All donations come with a certificate with the exact geo-coordinates of the protected land.
Let's go for the future of our earth and a healthy climate 🌳
Your Donation at a Glance
Specific use: 1€ donation protects 1 m² of rainforest
Good for the climate: this way, 60 kg of CO2 remain permanently bound in living biomass
Transparent: you will receive a certificate with the geo-coordinates and an aerial photo of the protected forest area
Lasting impact: your one-time donation guarantees the permanent protection of the area
Tax-deductible donation with donation receipt
Your wilderness certificate
You will receive a personalized certificate of the piece of wilderness you protected immediately after your donation.
Thanks to the geo-coordinates, you know exactly which piece of forest we are protecting with your donation.
Do you have your code with you?
Here you can personalize and download your certificate with the exact geo-coordinates of your square meters in the rainforest. You can also protect more forest if you wish.
About Wilderness International
The foundation, based in Canada, Peru and Germany, purchases legally secure wilderness areas and protects them for all futures. The purchases are refinanced by donations that ensure the long-term protection of the areas and enable environmental education projects and research on CO2 storage and biodiversity.
Wilderness International purchases primary rainforest areas with land title and legally protects them for all future. Donations refinance the purchases and at the same time finance long-term protection as well as environmental education and research. Donors receive a personalized certificate with the exact geo-coordinates and aerial photograph of the forest area they are protecting. Thus, the use and impact of the donation is tangible and directly traceable. We are currently working in the temperate rainforest of Western Canada and the Amazon rainforest of Peru, where we are protecting ancient primary rainforests.
It is important to protect the rainforest because this is the only way we can stop species extinction and climate change. They are home to the world's greatest biodiversity and store huge amounts of CO2. It is also important to protect rainforests because they are the basis of our existence: they provide us with clean air, clean water and stable rainfall. They also cool the environment.
70% of Canada is made up of large natural areas. 34% of the country is covered with forest, 53% of which is old-growth forest (1.2).
Everyone knows about the threat and the value of the Amazon forests. But at the same time, hardly anyone talks about Canada's forgotten ecosystem: British Columbia (BC) is home to the world's last large contiguous area of temperate rainforest (3). There are still old-growth forest, unlike in Germany. And yet, unfortunately, the timber industry is one of the most important economic sectors in Canada, and BC, of all places, is one of the last jurisdictions on earth that continues to allow large-scale logging of 600-1800 year old virgin forest giants (4). Between 2003 and 2010, logging in BC alone was responsible for an annualCO₂ emissions of 49.5 megatons (5), more than the whole of Finland.
Unique and species-rich nature
The temperate rainforest is a unique ecosystem. Its virgin forests are home to a unique biodiversity and giant trees that are thousands of years old. Rare ghost flowers are at home here, as well as bears, wolves and eagles.
Wilderness is the only place where countless species find a suitable habitat. The older forests become, the greater their genetic diversity and the better the reproductive capacity of their creatures. Thus, virgin forests guarantee the survival of countless species and are essential for the preservation of biodiversity (8). Only if existing nature is preserved can biodiversity spread from there again. This is essential for the restoration and rehabilitation of degraded forests, lands, and soils, especially those affected by desertification, drought, and floods.
After deforestation, some functional groups such as fungi, lichens, and beetles take up to 180 years to recover and never return to virgin forest levels. These slow recovery rates of some functional groups that are essential for ecosystem functioning make primary forests an irreplaceable biodiversity resource (9).
Climate Conservation
Temperate rainforests are the world's leaders in CO₂ storage. The trees and peatlands, which are up to 2,000 years old, play a crucial role in climate protection. Nowhere else do the trees and forest peatlands bind so much CO₂ - over 60 kg per square meter in the Misty Forest! In addition, large diameter trees have disproportionately massive amounts of carbon stored (10). By protecting them, we ensure that the carbon remains sequestered and does not return to the atmosphere as CO₂, where it would accelerate global warming. Greenhouse gases distribute themselves evenly in the atmosphere. According to the principle of climate neutrality, it is therefore irrelevant where emissions are caused or saved. Rather, the decisive factor is that the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is reduced globally.
In addition, we ensure other important functions of the forest for a stable climate: for example, its cooling and water storage function, without which important precipitation would not occur, so that it would become increasingly hot and dry. Furthermore, the forest produces vital oxygen and filters the air.
Protecting Canadian rainforests is therefore a tangible contribution to climate protection.
Wilderness has a positive impact globally
Protecting wilderness areas has many positive effects: Stable precipitation, clean air, clear water, biodiversity, climate preservation, resting places for retreat and recreation, fantastic landscapes, space for adventure and challenge, reflection on our roots. Where we protect these places has no bearing on how much we can benefit from these positive effects.
There is still wilderness in Canada
In Germany, too, there were once primeval forests with old trees all over the country. The fact that there is nothing left of it today shows that wilderness cannot be taken for granted. It is our responsibility to protect the remaining wilderness areas, no matter where they are.
Saying thank you to nature
The natural balance is only maintained if we no longer just take, but also give. Therefore, it is time to finally give back to nature. Let's say thank you for everything she provides us with - let's protect her.
Legal certainty and permanent protection
Canada is a constitutional state with strict regulations on ownership. This makes arbitrary expropriation impossible. Unlike in countries with less pronounced legal security, damage therefore entails comprehensive sanctions. The British Columbia Trespass Act clearly prohibits trespassing on private land. Violations are prosecuted on complaint, even if no damage has been done. A fence, natural boundaries or signs should be a given, which is why our lands are marked with signs. In addition, due to their remoteness and the undeveloped area, our protected areas can only be reached with great financial, material and time effort and not without risk. We control the protected areas during regular expeditions. The areas are purchased by Wilderness International and our Canadian sister foundation Wilderness International (Canada) by land registration. Our bylaws stipulate with the foundation's purpose that the lands will be left untouched and visited only for research and documentation purposes. The foundation construct prevents the rights over the disposition of property from resting with any one person. Rather, the foundation, and thus its land, always belongs to all the people involved in the foundation at time X. This ensures the long-term protection of the purchased land. We always make an advance payment when purchasing land. Your donation refinances the purchase. In this way, we ensure that your donation is actually used to protect exactly the piece of forest that you have selected.
Acute threat
Only about 25% of the original area of temperate rainforest remains in Canada. These last areas are exposed to various threats:
- Timber extraction in virgin forests
- Agricultural land displaces forests
- Urban sprawl and construction of infrastructure such as roads
- Canada's withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol
Sources:
1: Mongabay (2010). Canada Forest Information and Data. Retrieved 02/04/2022.
2: Watson, James E. M., Allan, James R. et al. (2018). Protect the last of the wild. Nature 563, p.27-30 (2018).
3: DellaSala, D.A.(ed.), 2010. temperate and boreal rainforests of the world: ecology and conservation, Island Press, Washington,D.C.
4: Wu, K., Sept. 14, 2019. what will it take to save B.C.'s old-growth forests?, Vancouver Sun, Vancouver.
5: Wieting, J., 2015. B.C. Forest Wake-Up Call: Heavy Carbon Losses Hit 10-Year Mark, Sierra Club BC, Victoria.
6: Quarks (2018). This is why rainforest destruction is worse than you think.
7: Ritchie, H. (2020). Climate change and flying: what share of global CO2 emissions come from aviation? Our world in data.
8: Gibson, L., Lee, T.M., et al. (2011). Primary forests are irreplaceable for sustaining tropical biodiversity. Nature 478, 378-381 (2011).
9: Spake, R., Ezard, T.H.G., Martin, P.A. et al. (2015). A meta-analysis of functional group responses to forest recovery outside of the tropics.
10: Mildrexler, D. J., Berner, L. T., Law, B. et al. (2020). Large Trees Dominate Carbon Storage in Forests East of the Cascade Crest in the United States Pacific Northwest. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change 3(20).
In Canada, good legal security helps us, as well as the legal situations and sanctions that even prohibit trespassing.
In Peru, we have additionally started a forest guardian program with local people. To ensure long-term protection, we also have several other measures in place. In general, we visit the areas on regular expeditions to check on them. We also work with local partners who inform us of any irregularities if necessary. The donations per square meter also already include the costs for property taxes.
Like no other, the legal form of the foundation allows a (charitable) purpose to be realized permanently and independently of outside interests, thus achieving the desired effects in the long term. It is thus the most long-term organizational construct currently known. Not even states, companies or national parks are designed for such a long term. This makes the foundation the only one that is oriented toward the lifespan of the ecosystems we protect.
There are no further obligations for you. The donation is one-time, and enables us as a foundation to ensure the long-term protection of the area. The sponsorship is a symbolic one. The forest area remains the property of the Foundation.