YOUR CART

Our Brands

Trusted brands using certified ethical and sustainable business practices.

Edible Routes Foundation

Edible Routes Foundation is a not-for-profit organization committed to finding local solutions to global environmental problems. From their base at Aali Farm near the Okhla Bird Sanctuary in Noida, Edible Routes Foundation focuses on environmental education, waste management, water harvesting, natural farming, and ecological restoration. They offer a monthly Nature Kids program to connect urban children with the wonders of nature, support a garbage dump restoration project in a low-income area, and maintain a nursery for native plants and trees, an office garden for organic produce, and a Metta Garden for other living beings. Funds earned through consultancies, campaigns, and workshops are used to provide services to marginalized communities free of charge.


EdifyConnect

EdifyConnect creates social value for organizations that work in and around major infrastructure projects in Australia by bridging the gap between large companies, small to medium enterprises, social enterprises, and Indigenous businesses. They specialize in social procurement, social impact policy implementation, capacity building, business development, and impact measurement. EdifyConnect assists companies with project mobilization, social procurement forecasting, partnerships with social enterprises and Indigenous businesses, inclusive employment practices, workplace culture, impact reporting, and communications. At the same time, they develop the capacity and capability of social enterprises and Indigenous businesses to help them access new opportunities while mitigating risks. EdifyConnect offers sliding scale pricing with lower rates for social enterprises, Indigenous businesses, and other small and medium enterprises. They prioritize relationships, trust, reciprocity, and connection over transactions. EdifyConnect is a Social Traders Certified Social Enterprise and an Australian Veteran Owned Business.


Education for Sustainability

Education for Sustainability provides climate literacy programs for schools and communities in Ireland to ensure that young people are educated about the climate crisis and have the knowledge, skills, and tools to take action. They offer workshops, teacher training, and an eight-week climate literacy course including interactive lessons, action-based projects, and engaging activities that connect students’ daily lives to environmental challenges and solutions. Schools receive a complete course package with lesson plans, resources, and training, allowing teachers to independently deliver the program in the future. Education for Sustainability also supports schools to eliminate single-use plastics. They are a member of the Irish Environmental Network and Social Enterprise Republic of Ireland. Education for Sustainability is a not-for-profit organization and reinvests all surplus towards their mission.


Edu-fy

Edu-fy aims to make quality education equitable for all learners regardless of location or socioeconomic situation. They work with collaborators to co-create innovative educational games, teaching resources, and projects that develop creative, collaborative, and culturally aware twenty-first-century thinkers. Straylings is a mastery game that encourages skill-building, improves problem-solving, strengthens neural connections, and reduces cognitive load. Our Essence is a literacy program that empowers children, particularly speakers of First Nation languages, to interact with the written word. The Collaborative Global Changemaker Program engages learners through complex real-world problem-solving based on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Edu-fy is a member of Catalyst 2030.


Edya

Edya started Eranduyaaya Plantation, a farm in southern Sri Lanka that is committed to regenerative agriculture. They improve the soil by adding compost, minerals, cow dung, paddy husk, and liquid fertilizers made from natural, local ingredients. Synthetic pesticides and weedicides have not been applied on the land for nearly 10 years. Edya uses insect repellent plants as sprays and intercrops during cultivation and stores them with crops after harvest. Weeding is done manually. Crops include coconut, mango, soursop, guava, wood apple, banana, passionfruit, turmeric, maize, cassava, kurakkan, green gram, groundnut, and vegetables. Edya provides employment opportunities for low-income families in the surrounding area, educates workers and customers on organic practices, and shares surplus harvest.


EeEssSee

EeEssSee, the Ecosystems Sound Collective, creates music with and for nature. Their music and soundscape compositions integrate sounds from nature and traditional and electronic instruments. They also offer sound massage, healing journeys, and events and nature connection experiences including forest bathing, nature-infused yoga, and nature-based games and creative activities. EeEssSee practices seva by offering free events and donation events for a cause and contributing a percent of profits to reforestation, nature conservation, and local communities in need. They look to cocreate and collaborate with other artists to support reconnection and healing with nature.


effiquency

effiquency provides consulting and audit services that support business development while preserving organizational culture and values and contributing to positive social and environmental impacts. They specialize in organizational assessments, quality and sustainability certifications, risk management, internal control systems, coaching, and change management. effiquency guarantees complete cost transparency with a focus on targeted, budgeted deliverables, team training, and knowledge transfer. They use their surplus to provide pro bono services. effiquency is part of Association pour la Promotion de l'Economie Sociale et Solidaire (APRES), a social and solidarity economy network for the Geneva region.


EGET Vakfı İktisadi İşletmesi

EGET Vakfı İktisadi İşletmesi uses ecological farming, sustainable wellness tourism, and natural value-added products to fund scholarships for university students in need in Türkiye. They provide ecological agriculture training and workshops, offer an ecology-focused summer camp called Living with Nature Academy, organize the annual Lavender Harvest Festival in Muğla, and produce lavender personal care products, St John's wort oil, cold-pressed olive oil, pomegranate syrup, herbal teas, medicinal plants, beeswax candles, and other environmentally responsible products. Their lavender distillation unit is certified organic by Ecocert. EGET Foundation Economic Enterprise is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Education, Geriatrics, Ecological Agriculture, Tourism (EGET) Foundation and contributes all surplus to educational scholarships. They are a member of Good4Trust and Açık Açık Derneği.


Eighty Percent

Eighty Percent creates natural fiber clothing in Sri Lanka with a focus on inclusivity, body positivity, and environmental responsibility. They offer linen dresses, skirts, pants, jumpsuits, tops, shorts, and rompers in simple timeless designs suitable for a wide range of ages and body shapes. Eighty Percent works with local factories in the Colombo suburbs that pay fair wages, maintain safe working conditions, and create employment opportunities for older women. They use plastic-free compostable packaging and give leftover fabric to workers so that they can create upcycled rugs, bags, and accessories for additional income. Eighty Percent supports community development and sustainability initiatives and donates to The Angel Foundation by Kelly Felder, which provides scholarships for vulnerable girls.


EJP Events

EJP Events plans weddings, meetings, conferences, and other events with a focus on sustainability and social justice. They steer clients towards event planning and venue sourcing solutions that have a low water impact, reduce waste to landfill, and promote the use of shared transport and cycling. EJP Events celebrates all marriages and is committed to inclusive event services. Their core principle is that true hospitality welcomes everyone. They are actively anti-racist in their communication materials, business processes, sourcing, and hiring practices. EJP Events offsets their carbon through Terrapass and makes regular donations to OPAL Environmental Justice, Don't Shoot PDX, and No More Freeways.


Ekatra

Ekatra is a sustainable stationery collective with women's empowerment at the core that specializes in reusable, handsewn journals made from upcycled materials. They also offer cards, notepads, cases, pouches, gift boxes, hampers, and more. Ekatra provides flexible employment opportunities for women from underprivileged communities and helps them develop new skills and financial independence. They use recycled materials and design for zero waste. Ekatra volunteers for Shine India Foundation and uses a portion of profits to pay for computer classes for underprivileged kids.


EKHOS

EKHOS supports the development of impact ecosystems so more social enterprises and impact companies emerge and generate solutions that prioritize people and the planet. They offer online courses, customized training programs, workshops, and consultancy services with a focus on social enterprises, impact business models, effective collaboration, and developing impact ecosystems. EKHOS also offers impact immersion trips in India and Argentina that include training sessions, field visits, professional connections, and cultural experiences. Their programs help people shift their professional paths, create and develop social enterprises, and form new collaborations. EKHOS is a founding member of Red de Impacto LATAM and Mesa de Impulso a las Empresas Sociales de Argentina.


Ekibeki

Ekibeki identifies traditional Indian crafts which are at risk of extinction and works to revive them through design, training, and market interventions and the development of self-sustaining artisan clusters that empower women and young artisans. They raise awareness about dying crafts, connect designers with traditional artisans to develop contemporary new products, and help artisans study market trends, demands, pricing, and more. Ekibeki prioritizes environmentally responsible materials. Their Gond, Chitrakathi and Pattachitra folk art stationery is made from recycled paper, and their copper enamel housewares and accessories are made with scrap materials from copperware manufacturers. Ekibeki measures impact based on how many artisans have willingly joined the sector and how many are able to sustain themselves purely through practicing their craft. They are part of the Creative Dignity volunteer movement.


Ek Katha Slow Clothing

Ek Katha creates clothing for women based on ethical craft practices and slow fashion principles. They provide an alternative to imported fast fashion made with synthetic materials. Ek Katha works with handloom fabrics from different parts of India including Kota Doria from Rajasthan, mulberry silk from Bengal, kala cotton from Gujarat, and Chanderi from Madhya Pradesh. They partner with Khamir, a local organization in Kutch, to revive the dying craft of batik printing, a unique form of wax resist block printing. Ek Katha is part of the Sustie community and has All India Artisans and Craftworkers Welfare Association (AIACA) Craftmark certification.


Eko Land Produce

Eko Land Produce cultivates coffee, spices, fruit, and vegetables using permaculture and regenerative agriculture techniques. The initiative was started by the founders of Polwaththa Eco Lodges, a sustainable tourism initiative near Digana, and was expanded to provide additional income and food security to the local community during the pandemic. Eko Land provides employment opportunities, fair prices for local produce, and a financial incentive for conserving forests in the region. They offer a premium product range for higher income consumers and more affordable products for local rural consumers. Eko Land organizes workshops and training for staff and the broader community on organic practices, value addition, and sustainable living. They support local schools, temples, and families in need.


Eksath Organic

Eksath Organic is a group of small-scale organic tea farmers near the Sinharaja rainforest World Heritage Site. The Sinharaja forest has been affected by the expansion of commercial tea cultivation. Eksath Organic focuses on organic farming for the environment, for the health of producers and consumers, and for the social and economic development of their members. They aim to provide organic products at a affordable price. The United Organic Tea Cultivators Association (Eksath Kabanika Te Waga Karuwange Sangamaya) consists of 87 farmers in Kiriweldola, Keeriwelagama, Batayaya and Pallegama. They are verified under an organic participatory guarantee system (PGS) for tea, fruit, vegetables, and spices which they sell locally. Their tea is processed at Nilmini Estate's Ahinsa tea factory in Morawaka and is certified organic for export to Japan. PARCIC Tokyo has been selling Eksath’s tea as a fair trade product in Japan since 2013.


Ekvilib Institute

Ekvilib Institute aims to cocreate a sustainable and balanced world of responsible individuals, businesses, and organizations and focuses on social responsibility, human rights, and development cooperation. They provide training and consulting services related to work-life balance, work team development, corporate social responsibility, socially responsible employee management, tax responsibility, and responsible citizenship. They also offer Family Friendly Company and Socially Responsible Employer certifications in Slovenia. Ekvilib Institute is part of the Platform for Development, Global Learning and Humanitarian Aid (SLOGA), Center for Information, Cooperation and Development of Non-Governmental Organizations (CNVOS), European Network on Debt and Development (EURODAD), Tax Justice Europe, CSR Europe, Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), and Global Sustainable Enterprise System (GSES).


El Castillo del Cacao

El Castillo del Cacao is Nicaragua's first commercial chocolate factory. It was started in 2005 in Matagalpa near the cacao growing areas of Matiguás and Waslala. Previously, cacao from these areas was going to waste, and the only chocolate in the market was imported. Now, El Castillo del Cacao sells high quality natural chocolate bars throughout Central America. They focus on sustainable livelihoods and environmentally responsible practices. El Castillo del Cacao promotes biodiversity by introducing water retention sites for insects, frogs, and birds and planting species that reduce soil erosion or attract local butterflies.


Elder Archaeology

Elder Archaeology engages, educates, and empowers communities through archaeology and heritage initiatives. They specialize in community excavations, heritage open days, education programs, job training initiatives, community engagement campaigns, public lectures, research services, and other social impact programs that make archaeology more accessible to the general public. By fostering a deep appreciation for shared history and preserving and promoting cultural heritage, they contribute to the social and economic well-being of the communities they serve. Elder Archaeology also supports local community groups and not-for-profit organizations with project design and delivery, fundraising, media strategy, and other services. They are a Community Interest Company (CIC) and a member of Social Enterprise UK, Manchester Community Central, and the Federation for Archaeological Managers and Employers (FAME).


Eldoku

Eldoku specializes in handcrafted textile products, celebrates traditional craftsmanship, and supports disadvantaged artisans in Türkiye. They offer handwoven bags, baskets, cushions, rugs, kilims, yoga and meditation pillows, and other personal and home accessories. Eldoku works with small-scale producers, women’s cooperatives, and family workshops who prioritize locally sourced materials. They are a member of Impact Hub Ankara.