Trusted brands using certified ethical and sustainable business practices.
Eat Right was started to help Sri Lankans transition to healthy eating habits. They offer customized meal plans, food delivery, and a restaurant in Kohuwala with juices, smoothies, wraps, salads, sandwiches, and nutritious mains made from all natural ingredients. They also conduct corporate workshops on healthy living. Eat Right provides their venue free of charge for youth groups and counseling programs and supports single mothers and children's homes.
Ebenezer Hill produces natural coffee and coconut products near Nawalapitiya in the Sri Lankan hill country. As production expands, the goal is to create livelihood opportunities for people in the surrounding community, particularly single mothers. They provide free classes to children in the area.
E Cane helps cane artisans in the Sri Lankan villages of Radawadunna and Wewaldeniya connect directly with customers through digital marketing and ecommerce. They offer handmade cane bins, baskets, light fixtures, furniture, and more as an alternative to imported plastic housewares. E Cane enables artisans to bypass middlemen, provide natural products at affordable rates, and ensure the sustainability of this traditional craft. The initiative was developed by a group of young people through the Youth Community Leadership Initiative (YCLI).
Echoing Green was established in 1987 to find and support emerging leaders with bold ideas to positively impact the world. Their annual Fellowship includes leadership development, wellbeing support, seed funding, virtual and in-person convenings, connections with experts and opportunities, and access to a broad, dynamic ecosystem. Fellows focus on the root causes of complex and interconnected global issues like climate change, education, health, human rights, poverty, and racial justice and become lifelong members of Echoing Green’s community. Echoing Green works collaboratively to drive social innovation and transform systems. They are part of Catalyst Now, Schwab Foundation's Global Alliance for Social Entrepreneurship, Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE), and the Earthshot Prize and Undaunted global network of accelerators. Echoing Green is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization and reinvests all surplus towards their purpose.
Eco360 provides sustainable alternatives to single-use plastics. Products are fully compostable and made from renewable resources. They include compostable straws, cutlery, coffee cups, takeaway containers, shopping bags, and garbage bags. A fixed percent of revenue is used to support reforestation activities in Sri Lanka.
Eco Abhiman produces environmentally responsible textiles in Sri Lanka and creates livelihood opportunities for unemployed youth. They specialize in naturally dyed clothing made with local flowers, nuts, bark, roots, and leaves. Participants have formed the Eco Abhiman Entrepreneurship Association to support training, skill development, knowledge exchange, and teamwork. They raise awareness about the impacts of toxic dyes on human health and the environment and offer natural alternatives.
Eco-Ability is dedicated to reducing waste and empowering people with special needs to gain meaningful employment in central Florida. Their zero waste store offers refillable and reusable home, office, personal care, and pet care products that make it easier to reduce single-use plastics. Refills are available online and through partner stores and pop-up events. Eco-Ability provides training and employment for differently-abled people so they can live a life of dignity and inclusion. The refill store is part of WorkAbility, a supported employment hub that provides wraparound support to young adults with special needs as they transition out of school-age support services. Their supported employee steering group is chaired by a person with a disability. WorkAbility is registered as a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization and reinvests all profits to expand their supported employment services.
Ecoathon was started to foster sustainability in the Maldives. They are developing a network of social enterprises, responsible businesses, and changemakers to spread best practices and support the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
Eco-Baccha produces naturally dyed kids' clothing to create a safe and healthy environment for our children. They specialize in pure cotton T-shirts colored with sustainably sourced madder, indigo, sappan wood, pomegranate, marigold, and other plant-based natural materials. All products are hand-dyed by local artisans. Eco-Baccha offers natural dye workshops and uses their platform to raise awareness about sustainability issues. They are part of WConnect Ahmedabad.
Ecobricks.org is the home of the Global Ecobrick Alliance (GEA), a collective of ecobrick leaders from around the world united in their efforts to transition from waste, trash, and pollution to circular, regenerative systems. An ecobrick is a PET bottle packed solid with clean and dry used plastic. Ecobricks are made to a set density to create reusable building blocks that sequester plastic and carbon dioxide from the biosphere. They can be used to create modular units, furniture, interactive spaces, gardens, play parks, structures, and more. The GEA maintains and develops the resources and infrastructure to serve local and global ecobrick movements. They developed the authentic ecobrick sequestered (AES) system for plastic offsetting and the Brikcoin manual blockchain to create a currency and economy based on the ecological service of plastic sequestration. The GEA is a for-Earth, not-for-profit enterprise based on regenerative and open source principles. They do not have corporate or government affiliations or sponsors and do not receive grants or donations. Revenue, expenses, and impact are fully disclosed. Their open books system and ecological impact accounting are publicly available online.
EcoCentric is a global boutique advisory firm that helps businesses take concrete steps towards sustainable practices and maximize both their social impact and their business performance. They focus on sustainability, strategic business development, partnerships, fundraising, communications, and marketing. EcoCentric has a "pay it forward" policy to give back a percentage of all profits, and they encourage their clients to do the same.
Ecoconscious Warrior uses photography, art, and blogging to raise awareness about environmental issues and inspire others to take individual and collective action. The focus is on transitioning to a more environmentally responsible lifestyle, supporting local and sustainable enterprises, and reducing everyday waste. Ecoconscious Warrior distributes reusable straws and bracelets for sea turtle conservation, contributes to coral restoration and rainforest reforestation, and participates in initiatives by Extinction Rebellion and The Pearl Protectors.
EcoCrews delivers sustainable environmental solutions for government and commercial projects while empowering disadvantaged youth through accredited training and meaningful employment. Services include revegetation, soft landscaping, weed control, wildlife corridor creation, seed collection and propagation, rural fencing construction, flora and fauna surveys, erosion control, marine and estuary debris cleanup, and land rehabilitation. EcoCrews creates employment pathways for Indigenous people, women working in non-traditional roles, and young people experiencing barriers to employment. They ensure that every project they undertake protects and enhances biodiversity, achieves local workforce and diversity and inclusion goals, and leaves a positive social and environmental legacy in the local community. EcoCrews was started by Campbell Page, a not-for-profit organization, and uses its surplus to support community services through its parent charity. They are a Social Traders Certified Social Enterprise and a member of the Social Enterprise Council of NSW & ACT (SECNA) and the Infrastructure Sustainability Council.
EcoDecisión is a pioneer in developing financing mechanisms for ecosystem services including climate change mitigation, water source protection and biodiversity conservation. Since 1995, they have been providing consulting services to international and national organizations, businesses, and government institutions through Latin America. Functioning natural ecosystems are the foundation of healthy economies, communities, and businesses, but in cost-benefit analysis decision making, the services provided by nature are often treated as if they have no value at all. EcoDecisión finds tangible, practical ways to change these calculations and develops creative mechanisms to mobilize investment that benefits nature and its stewards. They are a founding member of Red de Interesados en Servicios Ambientales and Articulación Regional Amazónica.
Eco di Barbara creates clothing and accessories from upcycled materials, natural fibers, plant-based dyes, and eco-printing and offers an alternative to the negative impacts of the fast fashion industry. Their dresses, shirts, pants, shorts, kimonos, bags, and other products are colored with kitchen waste like onion skins and avocado seeds and foraged medicinal plants like madder root. The dye materials are reused as long as possible, and when they lose their color, they are used for compost and natural fertilizer. Eco di Barbara is part of EthicalX by SLYCAN Trust.
Eco Earth supplies pure diatomaceous earth for natural pest control. Diatomaceous earth is silica that comes from the fossilized remains of prehistoric algae called diatoms. It is nontoxic to humans and other animals but it damages the exoskeleton of crawling insects like cockroaches, and bedbugs. The powder can be used to control household and garden pests, head lice, and fleas and tick on pets. Their diatomaceous earth is registered with the government as a natural pesticide, and every batch is checked to ensure that it is toxicant free. Eco Earth aims to reduce exposure to toxic insecticides and contribute to a safe and healthy environment.
Eco Everyday offers ethically sourced, environmentally responsible promotional merchandise in the United Kingdom. Their pens, pencils, notepads, bags, water bottles, mugs, badges, lanyards, school supplies, toys, seed kits, and other promotional items can be branded and customized for events and corporate gifts. Products are made from recycled rubber and plastic, aluminum, bamboo, Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certified wood, Fairtrade organic cotton, and natural waste materials. A portion of their proceeds are used to fund early childhood education in Kenya. Eco Everyday is a member of Social Enterprise UK.
Eco Femme is a women-led social enterprise based in Auroville, India that makes washable cloth pads, provides menstrual health education and promotes menstrual practices that are healthy, environmentally sustainable, culturally responsive and empowering. The pads are made from Indian organic cotton with a leakproof layer and are stitched by women in five independent production units that ensure fair wages and safe working conditions. When customers purchase pads or donate, the proceeds are used to provide menstrual health education and free pads to adolescent girls through their Pad for Pad program and subsidized pads to marginalized women through their Pads for Sisters program. Eco Femme develops educational resources, trains facilitators, offers consultancy services, and advocates for non-polluting menstrual practices through writing, film making, and public speaking. They work with a network of grassroots organizations, schools, and ambassadors across India.
Ecofoods was started to reduce food waste and make healthy, natural food more accessible to urban consumers. They offer dehydrated jackfruit, mango, papaya, pineapple, rambutan, banana, ginger, and tea blends under their Neli's brand. They also provide fresh cut local fruits for birthdays, work programs, religious ceremonies, and other events. Ecofoods preferentially hires people with disabilities.
Ecofrico offers affordable hemp accessories to make sustainable fashion more accessible and support craftspeople in Nepal. Their backpacks, fanny packs, crossbody bags, guitar and ukulele cases, yoga mat bags, and pouches are made from responsibly sourced hemp fiber and designed for durability.