This is an illustrative mock-up only. None of this content is real or approved for public display by either Reforest or Challenger.

The Challenger Impact Forest is our commitment to repair nature at the scale of our own footprint. Each year we measure the carbon from our business travel and fund biodiverse reforestation that removes it, restoring habitat that our people, partners and communities help grow over time.
We tally each year's business travel emissions.
We fund biodiverse reforestation that removes that carbon.
The Forest expands as our people and partners take part.
A tree for every staff anniversary.

Trees earned through learning and development.

Trees gifted to guests at Challenger events.

Suppliers and partners invited to grow the Forest.

Live tracking, once planting begins.


Indicative example; not an actual quote
At Challenger, we think in decades, not quarters. The Impact Forest lets us repair nature at the scale of our own footprint and watch that contribution grow, season after season. What matters most is that it is real and visible: habitat returning, communities and landscapes strengthened, carbon removed. Our people, our partners and our investors can stand in it, plant in it, and see exactly what we have built together.

The Challenger Impact Forest is a single, growing area of biodiverse native restoration, funded to repair land that needs it. Planted for biodiversity rather than carbon alone, it rebuilds whole habitat: soil, understorey, canopy and the wildlife that returns with them. It begins at the scale of our own footprint and grows each year as our people and partners add to it.
See live progressCommunities and stakeholders restoring land together.
Native species and habitat returning.
Whole landscapes repaired and reconnected.
Carbon removed as the forest matures.

The Forest is shaped with people who know this country and its ecosystems, guiding what is planted and how the land is brought back to health.
Habitat like this takes a lifetime to mature, and every species that returns is a sign the system is healing. When we plant for biodiversity, not only carbon, we rebuild the whole web: the soil, the understorey, the birds and the pollinators. A forest funded for the long term is the rarest and most valuable thing we can give this landscape.
Project ecology expert, name to be confirmed
Grown together, for the generations who follow.