Apple X Arbaro Fund; Tree Planting and Offsetting Emissions
Apple said "Every product. Every emission accounted for by 2030". It sounds like one of the most ambitious corporate climate commitments in the world.
But this is the lesser known reason why people (who know) are saying it's a scam.
Apple’s 2030 Climate Promise
By now, you’ve probably heard about Apple’s big plan.
By 2030, every Apple device is supposed to have a net zero climate impact.
Apple & Arbaro Fund Carbon Deal
Apple’s Carbon Offsetting Strategy
To reach carbon neutrality, Apple relies heavily on carbon offsetting.
Instead of eliminating all emissions at the source, where the pollution happens Apple funds projects that are supposed to remove carbon from the atmosphere.
In theory, this balances out the pollution created by manufacturing, supply chains, and product use.
One of Apple’s key partners in this strategy is the Arbaro Fund a private equity fund focused on forestry investments.
And this is where things get questionable.
The Arbaro Partnership: Carbon Credits or Commodity Crops?
Apple has partnered with the Arbaro Fund, a private equity firm based in Luxembourg.
- Here is the mechanical reality of the deal
- The Investment: Apple pays for land preparation, irrigation, and herbicides.
- The "Credit": Apple receives carbon credits based on estimated $CO_2$ capture.
- The Reality: These aren't "forests" in the traditional sense; they are industrial monoculture plantations designed for profit.
The Arbaro Fund’s primary objective is clear: generate financial returns.
Apple’s objective is to reduce its reported emissions.
These goals are not aligned with long-term climate stability.
They are aligned with short-term accounting and profitability.
The United Nations Connection: The Green Climate Fund (GCF)
I'll never forget when I was in Bosnia and 'United Nothing' was grafitied around Sarajevo, oh.
The specific vehicle for these investments is often the Arbaro Fund, which is backed by the Green Climate Fund (GCF)—the UN’s flagship fund for helping developing nations limit or reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
- Here is the mechanical reality of the deal
- The Investment (FP128): In 2020, the GCF Board approved a $25 million equity investment into the Arbaro Fund (Project FP128). This effectively gave a "UN Seal of Approval" to industrial eucalyptus plantations in countries like Paraguay, Sierra Leone, and Ghana.
- The Timeline & End Date: This isn't a permanent conservation effort; it is a time-bound financial product. The GCF-backed Arbaro Fund project has a completion date of October 30, 2035.
- The Exit Strategy: Because this is private equity, the goal is to "exit" the investment by 2035. This usually means selling the mature timber plantations to the highest bidder—which could be another logging company or a biomass energy plant—raising questions about whether that "captured" carbon stays in the ground once the UN and Apple move on to the next project.
The Industrial Forestry Timeline
2014 – 2035
2014 – 2020: The Foundation
Thousands of hectares of eucalyptus are planted in the San Pedro and Canindeyú departments of Paraguay. At this stage, the project is a standard commercial timber operation, not a “carbon removal” initiative.
2015: Operations Begin
March 12, 2020: UN Financial Backing
July 21, 2020: The Corporate Pledge
October 27, 2020: Human Rights Conflict
Indigenous Qom leader Bernarda Pesoa is physically assaulted while protesting a eucalyptus plantation on ancestral lands in Benjamín Aceval.
The project (by Fundación Paraguaya) aimed to sell biomass and wood for the following 10 years without obtaining Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC).
April 16, 2021: The Restore Fund Launch
Apple, Goldman Sachs, and Conservation International launch the $200 million Restore Fund, scaling up the same industrial forestry models used by Arbaro to generate financial returns and carbon credits.
2022: Expansion
October 30, 2035: The Exit Date
The official completion date for the UN-backed Arbaro investment. This is the “end of life” for the fund, where assets are scheduled to be sold off and the investment cycle closed.
Human Impact of Carbon Offsetting Projects (real)
Bernarda's Story of Conflict and Violence
The following case involving Fundación Paraguaya (rather than Apple specifically) serves as a critical warning of what happens when industrial "tree planting" is forced upon indigenous territories.
Bernarda Pesoa is a leader of the Qom indigenous community in the Benjamín Aceval municipality of Paraguay.
For nearly three decades, she has defended her people’s right to their ancestral lands, lands that provide their food, medicine, and cultural identity.
What happened to Barnarda
In October 2020, Bernarda was physically assaulted by a group of approximately nine people after she stood in opposition to a eucalyptus plantation being developed on her community’s territory.
The attackers, linked to proponents of the project, threatened to burn her home and continue the violence if she did not stop her resistance.
- Why They Resist
- The Qom people oppose these monocultures for the same reasons environmentalists are now questioning the "Restore Fund" model:
- Destruction of Ecosystems: The plantation site was home to medicinal plants and native trees used for subsistence and traditional handicrafts
- Environmental Degradation: Leaders warned that the eucalyptus monoculture would lead to the drying up of soil (erosion) and a critical loss of local biodiversity.
- Resource Depletion: The community highlighted that the water needed to sustain these fast-growing trees would threaten the water security of the entire area.
The “Consent” Illusion
The lack of consent narrative is revolting.
Much like the corporate carbon projects we see today, the developer claimed they had an agreement with community leaders.
However, the Qom people maintain that Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC) was never properly obtained from all eight affected communities, a claim later confirmed by the Paraguayan Institute for Indigenous Peoples (INDI).
The Selling of Biomass
Biomass is simply organic material from plants, like these eucalyptus trees, grown specifically to be harvested and burned for industrial fuel or charcoal, a process that eventually releases all that “offset” carbon back into the atmosphere
The motivation behind this specific project was not pure conservation. Just like the Arbaro Fund’s timber business, Fundación Paraguaya’s explicit goal was to sell biomass and wood from the eucalyptus over a ten-year period.
Bernarda’s story is a reminder that when a company says “tree planting,” they might actually mean “industrial commodity crop”—and the people who live on that land often pay the price in blood.
Resistance of Qom Women Against Monoculture Plantations
On October 27, 2020, a significant protest and subsequent physical altercation occurred in the Qom indigenous community of Santa Rosa, located in the Benjamín Aceval municipality of Paraguay.
The event and its ongoing aftermath are defined by the following details:
Core Reasons for the Protest
Lack of Legal Consent: The protesters and the Paraguayan Institute for Indigenous Peoples (INDI) confirmed that the developers, Fundación Paraguaya, did not conduct a Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC) process. This is a mandatory legal requirement under Paraguayan Law 1039 and ILO Convention 169 for any project affecting indigenous territories.
Environmental Destruction: The Qom women, many of whom are traditional artisans, argue that eucalyptus plantations dry out the soil and deplete water resources. They depend on the native ecosystem for medicinal plants and raw materials like carandillo fibers for their handicrafts.
Economic Exclusion: The project was reportedly negotiated with select leaders behind closed doors, creating a “business of poverty” that divided the community. Protesters argue the long-term environmental damage outweighs any short-term financial promises made by the foundation.
Escalation in April 2021 when Bernarda was attacked
These protests represent a broader struggle in the Paraguayan Chaco, where indigenous women are at the forefront of resisting industrial “green” projects that they claim bypass local laws and threaten their cultural survival.
Following the initial 2020 attack, tensions peaked again on April 17, 2021, when Bernarda Pesoa received fresh death threats via social media and audio messages.
Institutional Failure: Protesters pointed out that despite a court-ordered “no-contact” injunction against the 2020 attackers, the order was ignored.
The Demand for Safety: On April 20, 2021, the police attempted to hold a meeting in the San Francisco de Asís community. However, the protesters denounced this meeting because it was held in the territory of the aggressors, which they viewed as an act of institutional bias that ignored the safety and rights of the victims.
Carbon Offsetting Pesticides Are Poisoning a Generation
Think. If you are planting a monoculture on an industrial scale, you are using an industrial amount of pesticides too.
Poisoning the ground. The food. The nature. The people.
A school is located just 30m away from one of Apple's offsetting plantations. That is illegal.
Schools in the Line of Fire
In communities like Santa Rosa, industrial plantations sit immediately adjacent to residential areas and local schools.
This proximity violates basic safety standards, as schools are frequently caught in the “drift” of chemical spraying.
Despite the marketing of these projects as environmentally friendly, they rely on intensive applications of glyphosate and other herbicides to ensure the rapid growth of the monoculture.
Violation of Paraguayan Law. This is illegal
But Apple are above the law, right?
The current situation directly breaks Paraguayan Law 3742/09, which regulates the control of phytosanitary products for agricultural use. According to the law:
A 100-meter buffer zone must be maintained for ground-based spraying near schools, health centers, and residential areas.
A 200-meter buffer zone is required for aerial spraying.
Barriers of protection (living curtains of trees) must be established to prevent chemical drift.
In many project sites, these barriers are non-existent or insufficient, allowing chemicals to settle directly on school playgrounds and family gardens.
The “Green Warriors” Investigation: Tests on Children
The documentary series “Green Warriors” (specifically the episode “Paraguay’s Poisoned Fields”) documented the physical toll of this proximity.
Working with a team of geneticists, the investigators conducted comet assays (DNA tests) on children living near these plantations.
- Genetic Damage: The tests revealed that children exposed to the pesticides had significantly higher levels of DNA damage compared to those in unexposed areas.
- The Findings: The study showed “comets” in the DNA of the children, a clear indicator of genetic fragmentation caused by chronic exposure to agrochemicals. This damage is a precursor to cancer, respiratory illnesses, and congenital malformations.
Critical and Irreversible Risks
Internal documents and independent assessments of the industrial forestry sector in Paraguay categorize these health and environmental impacts in severe terms.
The Environmental and Social Impact Assessments (ESIA) for major plantation funds often acknowledge that without stringent mitigation, the risks to local populations are:
- Critical: Meaning the impact on human health and local water sources is of the highest priority and requires immediate intervention.
- Irreversible: The genetic damage found in children and the long-term contamination of the soil and local aquifers cannot be easily undone. Once the biodiversity of the native Chaco is replaced by a chemical-dependent monoculture, the ecosystem services that the Qom and other communities rely on—such as clean water and medicinal plants—are permanently altered.
The irony of carbon offsetting emissions to sell more products, while poisoning people and the environment at the same time
The irony of “Carbon Offsetting” in this context is that while a corporation in the Global North claims a reduction in its carbon footprint, the children in the Global South are left with a permanent biological footprint of toxic exposure.Irreversible Risk: Chemicals and Community Impact
The documentation for Foresta, one of the projects in Paraguay, is chilling.
The document explicitly lists the use of aggressive agrochemicals like glyphosate and fipronil as "high risk."
- The impact is felt most by the locals
- Health Hazards: There is a school located just 30 meters away from a plantation where children breathe in these chemicals daily.
- Resource Depletion: These vast eucalyptus monocultures use staggering amounts of water, drying up local sources.
- Violence: Local communities fighting to protect their native forests and livelihoods from these plantations have reported being met with threats and physical assault.
Toxic Chemicals and Public Health Risks
Project documentation linked to these plantations explicitly flags the use of agrochemicals as a high-risk factor.
Herbicides and pesticides, including substances like glyphosate and fipronil, are used at scale.
In some cases, plantations are located extremely close to communities.
There are reports of schools situated just metres away from areas where these chemicals are sprayed.
Children are exposed daily.
And according to the documentation, the risks are not temporary — they are described as having irreversible impacts.
Impact on Local Communities
For local communities, these projects are not abstract climate solutions.
They affect land access, food systems, and livelihoods.
Native forests are replaced with commercial plantations.
Agricultural land is lost.
Water sources are impacted.
And when communities resist these developments, there are documented cases of threats, intimidation, and violence.
This is the human cost of carbon offsetting at scale.
How Carbon Credits "Calculation" Actually Work
How Apple’s Carbon Credits Actually Work
Apple funds the development and maintenance of these plantations — covering land preparation, planting, irrigation, and chemical use.
In return, the projects generate carbon credits.
These credits represent the estimated amount of CO2 the trees are expected to absorb over time.
Apple then counts these credits toward its emissions reductions.
But there’s a critical detail:
These are not measurements of carbon already removed.
They are projections based on future tree growth.
How Carbon Credits Verified Through Verra & The VCS
The projects Apple invests in (via the Restore Fund) typically seek certification through Verra, the world’s largest voluntary carbon market registry.
The Methodology For Verifying Carbon Credits
Projects must follow the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS).
For monoculture plantations, this often falls under “Afforestation, Reforestation, and Revegetation” (ARR).
The Conflict of Interest
Critics point out that Verra-approved projects are often audited by third-party firms paid for by the project developers themselves.
This creates a “pay-to-play” incentive structure where overstating carbon capture (to issue more sellable credits) is a recurring controversy.
The Additionality Question
To get onto the Verra registry, a project must prove “additionality”, that the trees wouldn’t have been planted without the carbon credit money.
If a timber company was already planning to plant eucalyptus for profit, claiming “carbon credits” for it is considered “double-dipping” by environmental economists.
The "Carbon Permanence" Problem: A Profit-Maximizing Scenario
The biggest secret of these offsetting projects is that they aren't permanent.
Eucalyptus is a fast-growing wood commodity. In these regions, the harvest rotation is typically 10 to 13 years.
Apple’s partner is a private equity fund. Their primary goal is to return money to investors, not to save the planet. If the timber market is high, these trees can be harvested, burned for charcoal, or sold as assets.
The Carbon Trap: If the trees are cut down, the captured carbon is released back into the atmosphere. This makes the carbon credits—which Apple uses to claim “neutrality”—completely worthless for long-term climate stability.
Eucalyptus is an invasive species - this is serious.
Eucalyptus Monocultures in Paraguay and Brazil
The biggest secret of these offsetting projects is that they aren't permanent.
Eucalyptus is a fast-growing wood commodity. In these regions, the harvest rotation is typically 10 to 13 years.
Apple’s partner is a private equity fund. Their primary goal is to return money to investors, not to save the planet. If the timber market is high, these trees can be harvested, burned for charcoal, or sold as assets.
The projects linked to Apple’s carbon credits are primarily eucalyptus plantations in countries like Paraguay and Brazil.
Eucalyptus is fast-growing, highly profitable, and widely used in industrial forestry.
But it is also an invasive species in many of these regions.
These plantations are not diverse forests.
They are monocultures.
A monoculture is a single-species plantations designed for maximum yield, not ecological health.
The Carbon Offsetting Numbers Don't Add Up
According to Apple’s latest reports, their total emissions sit at roughly 14.5 million metric tons.
Meanwhile, the total carbon sequestered in the Paraguay projects is roughly 749,351 tons.
That accounts for only 5% of Apple’s emissions for a single year.
The scale is nowhere near where it needs to be, and the “sequestration” hasn’t even happened yet, it is a project built entirely on future assumptions and soil carbon estimates.
Even on paper, the carbon credit offsetting numbers don’t fully add up.
Apple’s annual emissions are in the tens of millions of metric tonnes.
The carbon credits generated by these projects represent only a small fraction of that total.
So even if everything worked perfectly — which it doesn’t — the scale is nowhere near enough.
The Problem With Carbon Credit Estimates
- Carbon credits in forestry projects are based on assumptions
- That the trees will survive
- That they will remain standing for decades
- None of this has happened yet - but they have still claimed the estimated credits?
This is the core issue. Assumptions are not true.
Carbon offsetting allows companies to balance emissions on paper without reducing them at the source.
It creates the appearance of climate action while shifting responsibility elsewhere — often to regions with fewer protections and lower costs.
And when those offsets are tied to commercial extraction, the credibility breaks down even further.
The Bottom Line
Every day, people say carbon offsetting is a "scam,"
Well.. this is exactly what they mean.
Apple may achieve their “carbon neutral” marketing goal on paper, but the climate benefit is a mirage that could disappear the moment the timber market shifts.
This isn’t conservation.
And i think at this point we’re all so tired with the greenwashing.
It’s commercial forestry dressed in green.
Apple may reach its carbon neutral targets on paper.
But if the underlying projects depend on harvesting trees, short-term investment cycles, and uncertain future outcomes, the climate benefit is not guaranteed.
If the trees are cut, burned, or fail to survive, the carbon goes straight back into the atmosphere.
And the entire system collapses.
Wait, there's more
Did we even address…
The displacement of local communities and small-scale farmers who often lose access to land when it is consolidated into massive, fenced-off industrial forestry blocks?
Or the fact that these “forests” are essentially biological deserts, where the dense canopy of a single exotic species prevents the growth of native flora and fails to support local wildlife?
Or that the carbon “removal” being sold to us assumes these trees will stand for centuries, yet they are often destined to be harvested and burned for industrial fuel within a decade?
The light is that not all tree planting projects are the same.
The irony isn’t on me that I am writing this from a Macbook (bought for me by work partners).
The reason I’m bringing this up is because of awareness.
I have been filming at the mangroves in Colombia, British Virgin Islands and Senegal. I have good tree planting projects to share soon.
There are some good ones, absolutely. And with this awareness we can demand that companies like Apple redirect their investment into projects that restore native ecosystems, protect biodiversity, and prioritise long-term carbon storage over short-term returns.
From me to you, with love and light
My loves, there is a lot here. Take this how you want. Now you are aware, go do your own digging.
I’m in a period of grievance for the year. For my grandmother, mother and mother nature.
So instead of mass engagement, below are the sources.
With love and light, QOV x
Support my work
I am a missionary for mother nature.
Along with sharing information on my personal Instagram, YouTube and TikTok accounts
Right now im filming Season 1 of a show about ethical consumption, at the source – around the world.
I left the corporate world after over a decade at a C Level to devote my life to making a positive impact through at the source reporting and film making.
We’re doing this together.
So any amount helps me cover the logistics.
I promise we are making an impact.
I get 4-10 Million monthly views, and even if 1% of people make a change, that’s EPIC.
Best Sustainable Laptops, Phones and iPads?
I’ve created an eco electronics directory of all of the latest laptops, phones and cases with their sustainability information.
But the reality is that.
Sustainable technology does not exisit.
Even if you buy a Fairphone, or an energy efficient Macbook
There is no such thing as eco tech.
That’s as far as we can go. “knowing the details”
But they all emit heavilly, they all send Africans into the belly of the earth to rip out cobalt, litium etc..
They all thrive on mass consumerism, upgrades and dependability.
So the Sustainable Electronics directory pages are all I can give right now.
REMEMBER to: Buy second hand if you can
What do I use?
This is nothing to celebrate since I’m dancing devils. But for transparency purposes.
- Laptop: Macbook Pro M4
- Phone: Google Pixel 7
Sources
https://globalforestcoalition.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Arbaro-paraguay-summary.pdf
https://web.archive.org/web/20210225045000/https://www.unique-landuse.de/en/the-divisions/forestry-en/forest-management-in-paraguay
https://www.unccd.int/sites/default/files/2022-04/GLO%20LAC%20ENGLISH_WEB.pdf
https://www.arbaro-advisors.com/fileadmin/user_upload/Publications_Arbaro_fund_I/Arbaro_Sustainability_Report_2023_2024-09-16_16-9_linked.pdf
https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/627201608179954710/pdf/A-Forest-s-Worth-Policy-options-for-a-sustainable-and-inclusive-forest-economy-in-Paraguay.pdf
https://www.apple.com/environment/pdf/Apple_Environmental_Progress_Report_2025.pdf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiP1l7jlIIA&t=462s
https://www.unique-wood.com/es/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2023/12/2022_FSP_Resumen-Publico-PMF.pdf
https://www.unccd.int/sites/default/files/2022-04/GLO%20LAC%20ENGLISH_WEB.pdf
https://payco.com.py/negocio/#agricola
https://payco.com.py/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Resumen-publico-y-PMF-2023.pdf
https://www.unique-landuse.de/en/projects/1940-commercial-forest-plantation-management-in-paraguay/