With MAQIT S.A., we’re turning support into real-world impact. Every kilogram of litter collected and every tree you fund, restores nature, protects biodiversity, reduces CO₂ and connects communities. Tracked, verified and celebrated; this is your measurable impact in action!

🧹 Cleanup Event Report

13 April 2026

Cleanup event photo
90
kg collected
56
residents' annual litter*
1200k
litres of water protected
90
🌳 native trees planted

* Based on Luxembourg's Environment Administration data: 1.6 kg of litter collected per resident per year.

90 kg total

Waste Breakdown

4.5 kg — Valorlux (recyclables) 5.0%
85.5 kg — General waste 94.6%
0.36 kg — Cigarette butts (1200 units) 0.4%

🚬 Cigarette Butt Impact

1200
butts collected
6.0L
volume removed
1.2M L
water pollution prevented

Each cigarette butt contains ~7,000 chemicals and can contaminate up to 1,000 litres of water. These butts will be recycled into urban furniture thanks to our partner Shime. Otherwise, they would take 10–15 years to decompose, releasing toxic microplastics into the environment.

On 13/04/2026 we collected 90 kg of litter, including 4,5 kg of recyclables (Valorlux bags), 53 kg of general waste and 32 kgs of wood and metal. According to Luxembourg’s Environment Administration, municipal cleaning services collect around 1,6 kg of litter per resident per year. With this cleanup, we removed the annual litter footprint of 56 people. Among the waste, we picked up around 1200 cigarette butts (6 lts in volume). Each butt contains about 7000 chemicals and can contaminate up to 1 000 liters of water. This cleanup potentially prevented the pollution of 1 200 000 liters of water! These butts will be recycled into urban furniture thanks to our partner Shime. Otherwise, they would have taken 10-15 years to decompose, releasing toxic microplastics into the environment. And with the CSFN tree planting program, these 90 kg also mean 90 new native trees planted!

🌳

With the CSFN tree planting program, these 90 kg also mean 90 new native trees planted!

Every kilogram of waste collected = one tree planted

Verified by CSFN Data verified through on-site documentation
CSFN - Your Sponsored Forest

🌲Your Sponsored Forest

Restoring ecosystems and livelihoods

90
🌱 Trees Funded
Main Impact Metric
6
Tree Species
0.34 tCO₂
CO₂ Captured
0.12 ha
Hectares Reforested
68.99 tCO₂
CO₂ Projected Lifetime
3.75 hours
Labor Hours

Interactive Tree Map

Click on the pins below to explore detailed information about each tree species in your sponsored forest.

Forest Biodiversity

Siamese Rosewood

Siamese Rosewood

Dalbergia cochinchinensis

It is a tree yielding valuable hardwood found in Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam.It is Critically Endangered caused by illegal logging and smuggling, and projected that the species could be exti...
6 month old sapling Seed pods Mature Flower
🔴 Conservation Priority 🔗 Learn more
Behada

Behada

Terminalia bellirica

Its fruit is edible for making preserves, and is used in traditional medicine to protect the liver and to treat respiratory conditions, including respiratory tract infections, cough, and sore throat; ...
foliage fruit flower mature adult
🍎 Food Source 💊 Medicinal 🔗 Learn more
Gurjan

Gurjan

Dipterocarpus turbinatus

Are lofty, growing 50 meters. Flowering is from March to April, and fruiting occurs in June and July. Endangered because of their valuable timber.
Sapling Flower Mature Trunk
🔴 Conservation Priority 🍎 Food Source 🔗 Learn more
Makha

Makha

Azfelia xylocarpa

A tree from Southeast Asia. It grows in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Burma in deciduous forests. It can reach 30 metres tall with a trunk up to 2 metres in diameter. The bark and seed are use...
Sapling Seed pod Mature Fruit Trunk
🔴 Conservation Priority 💊 Medicinal 🔗 Learn more
Golden Shower

Golden Shower

Cassia fistula

The golden shower is Thailand’s national tree. It is a semi-deciduous tree because it loses its leaves prior to flowering. The flesh of its fruit is used as a laxative, and the bark is used to treat s...
flower foliage seed pods in bloom mature adult
🍎 Food Source 🔗 Learn more
Ironwood of Burma

Ironwood of Burma

Xylia xylocarpa

Historically, this species has been harvested for its wood. Today, it is helping to reforest Thailand and other parts of Asia where it is native to (India to Indo-China). The seeds are edible, and the...
new growth foliage flower seed pod mature adult
🍎 Food Source 🔗 Learn more

🌳 Reforestation Sites

Mae Hong Son

📍 Mae Hong Son, Thailand

Trees Planted
🌳 90
Country
🌍 Thailand
Coordinates
📌 19.296°N, 98.437°E

Mae Hong Son is a remote, mountainous province in northern Thailand. Forests in this region have been fragmented, destroying the natural habitat for a host of mammals, birds, and other local wildlife. Planting native species in denuded areas reconnects the forests, reversing fragmentation and rebuilding a large enough natural habitat for these species to once again thrive. A retired local teacher invites children from the village to learn about their natural surrounding and how to be stewards of the forest.

🔗 View site details →
Mae Hong Son

🌍 Carbon & Oxygen Impact

🌿

CO₂ Captured

0.34 tCO₂
68.99 tCO₂ projected lifetime
Current 0.5% Lifetime goal
💨

O₂ Produced

244.4 kg
50.16 t projected lifetime
🫁
That's roughly 291 days of breathing oxygen for one person

💡 Did you know?

✈️ Your trees have already offset 820 miles (or 1318 km) of air travel. Your forest is grounding carbon, not planes!
🍔 Your forest has offset the carbon footprint of 134 beef burgers. A whole lot of guilt-free grilling!
🪨 Your grove has absorbed the equivalent of burning 138 kg of coal. Nature is the better energy source!
📺 Together your trees have soaked up the carbon from 9344 hours of streaming. That's non-stop TV for over a year!
🚗 Your grove has already absorbed the CO₂ equivalent of driving 830 miles (or 1334 km). Your forest is on the road to change!

🔮 Projected Impact

🚗 Your projected forest will absorb the lifetime equivalent of keeping 15 cars off the road for an entire year. Drive less, plant more!
🏠 Your forest's projected lifetime capture equals the entire annual carbon footprint of 9 homes. That's a whole neighbourhood, offset!
✈️ Your forest's projected lifetime absorption is equivalent to 121 transatlantic passenger flights. Your trees are grounding carbon for generations!

🌿 Species Ecosystem Benefits

Soil Health

Soil Health

Improves the quality of the soil with nitrogen fixation and/or it reduces soil erosion from its extended root system.

Anti-wind

Anti-wind

Protection from the wind helping other species flourish, and reducing water evaporation from the soil and topsoil erosion.

Biodiversity

Biodiversity

Helps to restock various animal species, particularly polinators, thus helping to proliferate a diverse variety of flora and fauna overall.

Traditional Medicine

Traditional Medicine

Produces leaves, roots, bark and/or fruit that is used in traditional medicine.

Products

Products

Produces raw materials from flowers, fruit, leaves and/or bark that can be turned into products such as cosmetics, rope, dye or bio-fuel.

Canopy & Natural Fencing

Canopy & Natural Fencing

Protection for crops and shade for livestock, and a natural demarcation of property or different land use areas.

🎯 Community & Environmental Impact

Food Security

Food Security

Bears edible fruit or other consumable, providing food security for the local community. Supports UN SDG 2: Zero Hunger

CO2 Absorption

CO2 Absorption

Absobs CO2 through photosynthesis, offsetting human-generated carbon emissions over time. Supports UN SDG 13: Climate Action

Environmental Protection

Environmental Protection

Synergystic with the local ecosystem for positive environmental impact, including wildlife habitat, water conservation, and soil restoration. Supports UN SDG 15: Life on Land

Employment Equality

Employment Equality

Hiring practices balanced between women and men, with equal opportunities at the management and decision-making levels. Supports UN SDG 5: Gender Equality

Job Creation

Job Creation

Generates a variety of jobs that help lift the community which may include site preparation and infrastructure, education, seedling preparation, planting, monitoring, and management. Supports UN SDG 8: Decent Work & Economic Growth

🐾 Wildlife Biodiversity Protection

Our reforestation efforts in Thailand help protect endangered species and restore critical habitats for local wildlife.

Asian Elephant

Asian Elephant

Endangered

An important keystone species, loss and fragmentation of habitat is likely the biggest threat to Elephas maximus indicus throughout Southeast Asia today.

Quick Facts
🌟Extremely sociable
🌿Love bananas, rice and sugarcane
🔍Lord Ganesha, Remover of Obstacles
Indochinese Tiger

Indochinese Tiger

Critically Endangered

Panthera tigris corbetti's is threatened by poaching for the illegal wildlife trade, habitat fragmentation and loss, and depletion of natural prey.

Quick Facts
🌟Largest of all the cats, weighing up to 250 kg (550 lbs)
🌿Only 220 remain in the wild, most in Thailand
🔍Have long claws that are retractable
Bengal Slow Loris

Bengal Slow Loris

Endangered

Nycticebus bengalensis is threatened with extinction due to growing demand in the exotic pet trade, traditional medicine and habitat loss due to fragmentation.

Quick Facts
🌟Communicates sex, age, health and social status through scent
🌿Reach sexual maturity at 20 months, and reproduce annually
🔍Can live up to 20 years

Download our APP and start cleaning

Available in multiple languages!

fUND planting TREES
WE CLEAN-up TRASH

CSFN cleans what doesn’t belong in nature (trash) 🌍 Your funds plant what’s needed most: trees!

It’s a perfect match! For every tree you fund, CSFN cleans 1kg of trash 🌿 100% real & verified