How do we protect the climate, together?

With ForTomorrow, you can offset the emissions you can’t avoid yet. Through our own, reliable climate protection projects. We reduce and capture CO2 emissions in Europe for maximum climate protection.

  • Reduce emissions

    We cancel EU emission rights

    Together, we take away the right to emit CO2 from around 11 000 big polluters. This is the most effective way to reduce emissions we know of.

    • Regulated across the EU
    • Controlled by TÜV
    • Drives the green economy
    About emissions rights More about canceling emissions rights
  • Capture emissions

    We plant mixed forests in Germany

    We plant new forests that are protected by Germany’s Federal Forest Act.

    • Climate resistant mixed forests
    • Strengthens the domestic ecosystem
    • Long-term climate protection
    About afforestation How we do afforestation

Our 2 249 supporters already offset
43 917 tonnes
of CO2 emissions

44 000 Tonnes, cumulative
22 000 T
The running sum of our impact, month by month
Year Month Tonnes, cumulative
2022 January 9 286 T
February 9 800 T
March 12 201 T
April 12 490 T
May 12 780 T
June 13 294 T
July 13 986 T
August 14 830 T
September 15 415 T
October 17 121 T
November 17 502 T
December 18 691 T
2023 January 19 196 T
February 19 850 T
March 20 339 T
April 21 843 T
May 22 255 T
June 22 803 T
July 23 364 T
August 23 744 T
September 24 761 T
October 26 295 T
November 26 818 T
December 30 050 T
2024 January 32 117 T
February 33 537 T
March 34 197 T
April 35 015 T
May 35 546 T
June 36 374 T
July 37 403 T
August 37 942 T
September 38 464 T
October 39 052 T
November 39 623 T
December 41 367 T
2024 January 42 252 T
February 43 219 T
March 43 917 T

Becoming carbon neutral is easy with our climate subscriptions

Three ways to support climate action

Because we're a non-profit, you can fully deduct your donations from your income tax in Germany.

Common questions

How does CO2 offsetting with emission rights work?

In the EU, the energy sector, industry and (in some cases) airlines have to buy emission rights for their CO2 emissions every year. The EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) covers 40 per cent of industry. Just as you have to pay for the disposal of your waste, the companies involved have to pay for their CO2 emissions.

However, the amount of emission rights is limited by the EU so that carbon emissions in 2030 are at least 55 per cent lower than in 1990.

The emissions from industry are recorded and checked every year by the TÜV. Emission rights must then be submitted for the recorded quantity, otherwise penalties will be imposed.

We buy up emission rights and set them aside in a special account. We then decommission or cancel these emission rights without utilising them. This is how we reduce the permitted CO2 emissions of European industry, ensure that sustainable technologies are established, and drive forward the energy transition.

In our monthly Impact Report, we share our account statement on the cancelled emission rights. We are scientifically monitored by Prof. Dr Grischa Perino from the University of Hamburg. He verifies that the EU emission rights are actually used for climate protection, which is crucial to us.

Who receives the money when you buy emission rights?

The German government auctions emission rights on the EEX energy exchange. The money collected goes towards the Energy and Climate Fund and is invested in climate protection. In 2018, for example, over 1 billion euros were used for the low-carbon Building Refurbishment Programme and the continued development of electromobility.

If I buy away emission rights, won't that harm the economy?

No, the scarcity of emission rights does not change how many goods are produced in the EU; it changes the way they are produced.

Let’s take the example of electricity production in the EU. If the price of emission rights goes up, the short-term effect is that electricity is produced with lower CO2 emissions, e.g. in efficient gas-fired power plants.

In the long term, it will result in the increased construction of plants that do not emit any CO2 at all during electricity production, e.g. wind power.

Is it possible the EU will simply release more emission rights if we decommission too many?

No. We asked our scientific advisor Prof Dr. Grischa Perino this very same question before ForTomorrow was founded.

He believes it is possible the EU would limit ForTomorrow’s influence on the Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) if we cancelled so many emission rights at once that we would jeopardise the functioning of the system. We would have to buy hundreds of millions of emission rights to get to that point, but we are a long way from that.

The EU’s goal is to reduce emissions in order to achieve the Paris target of keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees. The EU ETS is the primary instrument to achieve this. When it was designed, the cancellation of emission rights for additional climate protection was already considered a valid approach.

What influence does the market stability reserve have on emission trading?

The market stability reserve in the European Emissions Trading System was introduced to stabilise the prices on the CO2 market. The following events led to a high surplus of emission rights:

  • Relative to demand, too many emission rights were made available to industrial companies and plant operators. Unused emission rights can be carried over from one year to the next.
  • During the 2008/2009 economic crisis, industrial emissions fell more sharply than expected due to lower production.
  • Plants were allowed to offset some of their emissions by reducing emissions in developing countries.

These events resulted in a large number of emission rights remaining unused. The EU therefore decided to auction fewer rights and transfer the unauctioned portion to a market stability reserve.

The EU not only records how many emission rights are on the market, but also how many have been used for actual CO2 emissions and how many have been cancelled. Based on the number of available emission rights, the EU calculates how many rights will be auctioned and how many will be transferred to the market stability reserve.

In 2023, the market stability reserve started to cancel surplus quantities of emission rights. This means that if we refrain from cancelling our emission rights, they will still be counted by the EU as available surplus quantities which will result in the EU cancelling even more rights. If we did cancel our emission rights, the EU might cancel fewer. Therefore, we put the emission rights in our account so that they are no longer available on the market but they will be counted. We then only cancel our emission rights when the EU has stopped cancelling theirs.

This happens when no more emission rights are transferred to the market stability reserve. Under the current regulation, this is the case when the surplus of emission rights falls below 833 million.

Can I buy emission rights from you and sell them later?

No, because that would not be climate protection. If you buy emission rights and release them again, they will then be used to emit CO2.

For effective climate protection, emission rights must be permanently withdrawn from circulation. If you buy emission rights away from industry with us, they can never be used again.

Does additionality apply if you decommission emission rights?

Absolutely! If you didn’t support us in taking these emission rights off the market, they would simply be used by companies to emit CO2. We can only prevent tonnes of CO2 from being emitted because you cancel these emission rights with us.