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EthioTrees obtains Sylvera’s highest issuing ARR rating

Sylvera has awarded EthioTrees an A rating, the highest full ex-post rating held by any currently issuing ARR project on their platform. This milestone reflects a decade of continuous efforts: restoring degraded communal land through exclosures, embedding agroforestry systems that give smallholder farmers a direct stake, and channelling carbon revenues consistently to participating households. Behind …

EthioTrees achieves BBB post-issuance rating

We are proud to announce that EthioTrees has received a BBB rating from two leading independent carbon rating agencies, Sylvera and BeZero. This recognition reflects the project’s strong performance and its credibility in delivering high-impact carbon removals. With this rating, EthioTrees ranks among the world’s top 10 Afforestation, Reforestation, and Revegetation (ARR) programs globally, and …

Building resilience through Plan Vivo projects

High integrity in the carbon space today goes beyond robust science. It reflects a broader shift among corporates, from focusing purely on carbon accounting to evaluating how projects strengthen the resilience of ecosystems, carbon outcomes, and local communities. Carbon  credits linked to vulnerable landscapes or communities carry growing risks, particularly in the face of intensifying …

Tigray coffee: Growing high‑value coffee through  agroforestry

Ethiopia has long been celebrated as the birthplace of coffee, known worldwide for its rich and diverse flavors. Yet while many coffee lovers have tasted Ethiopian beans, few have experienced coffee from the Tigray Region, where the dry climate and high altitude create a distinctive profile with subtle, spice‑like notes that set it apart from …

Looking back at 2025: Our projects highlights & impacts

The past year was marked by growth across our projects and teams. Highlights include the launch of a new mangrove restoration area in Inhambane Bay, Mozambique, and progress on a soon-to-be-certified project in the Bolivian Andes. Above all, 2025 was defined by learning, from the field and the market, through key climate events, strengthened partnerships, and participatory impact assessments

Honey harvesting: Creating value from our forests

Until  now, forests have often been valued mainly for their timber. Yet they provide far more than wood and carbon storage. Forests offer a wide range of non-timber forest products (NTFPs) that sustain millions of people worldwide. From  medicinal plants and wild fruits to honey and natural resins, the resources sustain rural economies and cultural …

Exclosures for landscape restoration in Tigray

In the North Ethiopian Highlands, decades of agricultural expansion, overgrazing, and unsustainable forest use have left the land severely degraded. Ethiotrees is tackling this challenge through exclosures, community managed areas that drive landscape regeneration. We spoke with Project Coordinator Seifu Gebreslassie, one of the founders of Ethiotrees, who has been managing the project together with …

First benefit sharing

Kukumuty – a major milestone for the Kukumuty project: with the release of its first annual report, 8,660 carbon credits were issued—and quickly sold out—allowing us to share 60% of the benefits directly with participating communities for the first time. We’re thrilled to announce a significant milestone for the Kukumuty project: with its first annual …

Frankincense trees

EthioTrees – Frankincense trees (Boswellia papyrifera) are remarkable for both their ecological resilience and their cultural value, thanks to the aromatic resin they produce—frankincense, treasured for millennia. Native to the arid highlands of northeastern Africa, these trees face mounting threats, but the EthioTrees ecosystem restoration efforts are offering new hope for their future. Thanks to …