Billion Tree Campaign The
Green Belt Movement began its activity in Africa in 1977, eventually planting more than 30 million trees. The Billion Tree Campaign was inspired by
Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Wangari Maathai, founder of the Green Belt Movement. When an executive in the United States told Maathai their corporation was planning to plant a million trees, her response was: "That's great, but what we really need is to plant a billion trees." The project was launched in 2006 by the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) under the patronage of
Prince Albert II of Monaco and the World Agroforestry Centre-
ICRAF as a response to the challenges of
climate change, as well as to a wider array of sustainability challenges from water supply to
biodiversity loss, and achieved the initial target of planting a billion trees in 2007. The billionth tree, commonly known as an
African olive, was planted in Ethiopia in November 2007. In 2008, the campaign's objective was raised to 7 billion trees, a goal which was surpassed three months before its target of the climate change conference that was held in
Copenhagen, Denmark, in December 2009. The 2-billionth tree took root as part of the United Nations
World Food Programme agroforestry initiative. The campaign's target was then raised to seven billion trees. In 2009, UNEP mobilized action across the globe through the "Twitter for Trees" campaign. UNEP pledged to plant one tree to feed into the Billion Tree Campaign for every follower who joined from 5 May 2009 to World Environment Day on 5 June 2009. The campaign was a success, with 10,300 people following the page by World Environment Day. The
World Organization of the Scout Movement also planted trees under the campaign, in line with its mandate to study and protect nature across several countries.
United Nations Peacekeeping missions also joined the campaign and planted trees within their field missions in East Timor, Ivory Coast, Darfur, Lebanon, Haiti, Congo, and Liberia, among others.
After the campaign Felix Finkbeiner addressed the United Nations in a speech to open the International Year of Forests 2011, saying: "It is now time that we work together. We combine our forces, old and young, rich and poor; and together, we can plant a trillion trees. We can start the Trillion Tree Campaign." In December 2011, after more than 12 billion trees had been planted, UNEP formally handed management of the program to the youth-led not-for-profit
Plant-for-the-Planet Foundation (an organisation that had been participating in the Billion Tree Campaign since 2007), based in
Tutzing, Germany. Momentum has since continued, with 40,000 young ambassadors spreading the message in over 100 countries. In 2015, researcher
Tom Crowther found that about 3 trillion trees exist in the world and later it was also estimated that planting 1.2 trillion more trees would
counteract 10 years of
anthropogenic CO2 emissions. In 2017,
Pakistan's
Billion Tree Tsunami restored 350,000
hectares of forests. On 9 March 2018, the Trillion Tree Declaration was signed at the
Grimaldi Forum in Monaco. Signatories include
Prince Albert II of Monaco,
Gyalwang Drukpa,
Patricia Espinosa in collaboration with the
WWF, WCS, and
BirdLife International. In September 2019, the Plant-for-the-Planet app was released under an open-source license. It allowed users to register planted trees or to plant trees by donating to different tree-planting organizations around the world. The foundation does not take any commissions for donations made through the campaign.
One Trillion Tree initiative The 2020
World Economic Forum, held in Davos, announced the creation of the One Trillion Tree initiative platform for governments, businesses, and civil society to provide support to the
UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2020–2030), led by
UNEP and
FAO. Forum participant
Donald Trump, then-president of the United States, announced that the government of the U.S. would commit to the initiative. ==Principles==