Our work is coastal and marine — not abstract offsets, and not tree-planting at a distance, but the living shoreline itself: protected where it still thrives, and restored where it has been worn down.
Where land reaches farthest into the sea, habitats concentrate and overlap. Protecting whole headlands keeps these mosaics intact rather than fragmented.
Rock and living reefs are the nurseries of coastal life. We work to relieve the pressures that break them down and give them room to recover.
Mangrove forests defend shorelines, raise young fish, and lock away carbon for centuries. Restoring them repays itself many times over.
Among the most effective carbon sinks on Earth, seagrass meadows are easily lost and slow to return. We help re-establish the conditions they need.
The soft margin between land and sea filters water, buffers storms, and stores carbon deep in its sediments.
Coastal ecosystems hold carbon far denser than forests on land. Keeping it in the ground is conservation and climate work at once.
Secure and relieve the pressure on places that still hold their richness, so that what remains is not quietly lost.
Bring back degraded shoreline — seagrass, mangrove, saltmarsh, reef — working with natural processes rather than against them.
Care for these places over decades, through patient monitoring and local partnership — not one-off projects.
Know when to do less. Often the most powerful intervention is protection, time and restraint.
A coastline left more alive than we found it.