Part of the Solution – Not the Pollution
Have you seen the little Tree-Nation badge at the bottom of this blog? I’m talking about the one that says “CO2 Neutral Website.”
When you click it, you can see our Visonic Dome Forest. 👈 Or just click here. Save yourself the scroll.
All those trees help offset the carbon footprint of hosting visonicdome.com.
The Visonic Dome Forest is still small, but every month Tree-Nation plants another 2 trees of different species, all around the world.
What’s more, it’s totally automatic. As web traffic picks up, they plant more and more trees. Pretty soon, we’ll have a nice little Visonic Dome orchard growing out there…
Planeteer Alert!!
But why stop there? Why not offset all of our carbon emissions?
Tree-Nation makes planting trees and off-setting carbon emissions so easy, why not take it to the next level?
Of course, I’m talking about the upcoming Kickstarter campaign* –
(do I ever talk about anything else?)
If we plant a tree in the name of every backer who pledges for a Visonic Dome on Kickstarter, we can minimize the environmental impact of shipping and manufacturing. We might even make the Visonic Dome a net-zero emissions product.
Picture this: with a planned production quantity of 5,000 Visonic Domes, we could have 5,000 backers responsible for 5,000 new trees. Thousands of trees planted all over the world! Sucking carbon out of the atmosphere like a smog-flavored milkshake!
Sluuuuuurp!
Tree-Nation is like crowdfunded carbon offsetting.
This makes so much sense to me, I can’t figure out why more companies aren’t doing it.
In the grand scheme of things, the Visonic Dome is on the small end as far as production and manufacturing go.
Even so, producing any product means some impact on the environment. Minimizing that impact is a no-brainer.
What’s more, reducing your carbon impact with trees – nature’s lungs – is inexpensive and effective.
By partnering with Tree-Nation, the Visonic Dome Kickstarter backers can claim their own, personalized tree. They can see the tree species, where it’s planted, by whom, and how much CO2 the tree will remove from the atmosphere over its lifetime.