Rainforest Action Network

Rainforest Action Network

Global nonprofit campaigns for forest preservation

Overview

Rainforest Action Network is a nonprofit that campaigns to protect forests, defend the climate, and uphold human rights by partnering with Indigenous communities and frontline groups worldwide. It operates campaigns and advocacy programs that combine research, grassroots organizing, storytelling, and partnerships to pressure companies and policymakers, funded by donations and grants. It differentiates itself by emphasizing frontline Indigenous partnerships and global forest regions, using strategic campaigns and public action rather than relying solely on lobbying or legal action. Its goal is to create systemic change that reduces deforestation, protects the climate, and defends the rights of Indigenous and frontline communities.

About Rainforest Action Network

Simplify's Rating
Why Rainforest Action Network is rated
B-
Rated B on Competitive Edge
Rated B on Growth Potential
Rated C on Differentiation

Industries

Social Impact

Company Size

51-200

Company Stage

Series A

Total Funding

$15M

Headquarters

San Francisco, California

Founded

1985

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Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • 2025 Banking on Climate Chaos report exposed $869 billion in 2024 fossil fuel financing by top 65 global banks.
  • RAN's 2024 CBD COP16 and G20 advocacy amplified structural finance reform demands for halting deforestation-linked capital flows.
  • Forests & Finance Coalition partnership, led by Merel van der Mark, blocks financial institutions from funding tropical deforestation and rights violations.

What critics are saying

  • Tropical Forests Forever Facility lacks Indigenous governance and legal safeguards, risking debt-based extractive markets by November 2026 at 50–70% probability.
  • COP30 Muternaut decision failed to mandate fossil fuel phaseout or binding finance discipline, weakening corporate accountability enforcement by mid-2027 at 60–80% probability.
  • Voluntary mechanisms will continue failing to halt finance for palm oil, soy, and paper agribusiness by early 2027 at 70–90% probability.

What makes Rainforest Action Network unique

  • Four decades of strategic corporate campaigns targeting banks, insurers, and agribusinesses for deforestation and climate harm.
  • Exclusive ownership of the 17-year Banking on Climate Chaos report, the world's most comprehensive fossil fuel finance analysis.
  • Direct grants to Indigenous and frontline communities globally, enabling grassroots-led environmental solutions without corporate intermediaries.

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Funding

Total Funding

$15M

Meets

Industry Average

Funded Over

1 Rounds

Series A funding typically happens when a startup has a product and some customers, and now needs funding to scale. This money is usually used to grow the team, expand marketing, and improve the product. Venture capital firms are frequently the main investors here.
Series A Funding Comparison
Meet Average

Industry standards

$15M
$8.2M
Discord
$15M
Canva
$15M
Rainforest Action Network
$30M
Kalshi

Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

Paid Vacation

Paid Holidays

Flexible Work Hours

Remote Work Options

Sabbatical Leave

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

-1%

1 year growth

-1%

2 year growth

-1%
Rainforest Action Network
Nov 9th, 2025
Media Brief: The Forests and Finance Coalition and Rainforest Action Network at COP30

Media brief: the Forests and Finance Coalition and Rainforest Action Network at COP30. Rainforest Action Network recognizes the immense stakes for people and the planet dependent on the outcome of the global negotiations underway at COP30, Nov 11-21 in Belem, Brazil. RAN's forty year history of corporate campaigning has centered around the same main themes underpinning this year's COP: * The inextricable role of deforestation and finance in driving the climate crisis; * The central importance of defending Indigenous land rights; * The essential need for corporate accountability to keep forests standing and fossil fuels in the ground. Rainforest Action Network is issuing several major reports and sending a top level delegation to attend the COP to participate in the process, both as delegates inside the UN Blue Zone as well as in the side events and street protests driven by grassroots movements occurring simultaneously outside of the official process. If you are covering COP30 from Belem or afar, and wish to speak with or receive quotes from members of its team, Rainforest Action Network is available to offer updates, analysis and civil society responses to developments throughout the following weeks. Important links to recent F&F and RAN publications: Areas of issue expertise among this delegation: * The central importance of addressing industrial deforestation and defending Indigenous land rights in all efforts to keep forests standing and address the climate crisis. * The urgent need for structural finance reform and regulation. * The failure of voluntary mechanisms to stem financial flows into destructive sectors. * Implementation = accountability + regulation. Real implementation means stopping harmful finance flows from banks, investors and governments. No more voluntary pledges; urgent need for enforceable rules. * Analysis of false solutions: this team has years of experience interpreting and assessing corporate-driven attempts to introduce half-measures and use greenwash to distract and delay from the need for fundamental changes to the status quo. * Finance integrity, not new vehicles - TFFF and the roadmap will dominate headlines, but the real test is whether COP30 keeps public-finance and accountability alive. * Just transition includes the land sector - agriculture, forestry and mining transitions must be part of the JTWP, with communities and Indigenous Peoples shaping them. * Why offsets are a sham. Rainforest Action Network oppose carbon and biodiversity markets outright. They distract, distort and deepen harm. Available spokespeople in person in Belem: Ginger Cassady, Executive Director, Rainforest Action Network Ginger Cassady is the Executive Director of Rainforest Action Network. She has spent her career working at the intersection of environmental and social justice issues. She has over 20 years of experience securing transformational change with some of the world's largest corporations and financiers through global campaigns and litigation to protect the environment and uphold human rights. Leila Salazar Lopez, Executive Director, Amazon Watch, Board Member, Rainforest Action Network Leila is Executive Director of Amazon Watch, leading the organization in its work to protect and defend the Amazon rainforest and climate in solidarity with Indigenous peoples. For nearly 30 years Leila has worked to defend the world's rainforests, human rights, and climate through international solidarity and advocacy campaigns at Amazon Watch, Global Exchange, and Rainforest Action Network, where she joined the Board of Directors in 2023. She is also a founding steering committee member of the Amazonia for Life: Protect 80% by 2025 Initiative, a Daughters for Earth Advisory Board Member, a Latin America Advisor for the Global Fund for Women, and a Greenpeace Voting Member. Merel van der Mark, Forests & Finance Coalition Coordinator and RAN Senior Forest Campaigner Merel is a senior forest campaigner with Rainforest Action Netowrk and the coordinator of the Forests & Finance Coalition, a coalition of NGOs that aim to prevent financial institutions from financing tropical deforestation and rights violations. Prior to these roles, she has lived in the Brazilian Amazon for more than 10 years, working with Greenpeace Amazon, among others, on cattle and soy campaigns. Tom Picken, Forests & Finance Campaign Director with Rainforest Action Network Tom Picken is the Campaign Director for Forests & Finance at Rainforest Action Network, where he works to challenge the financial sector's role in driving environmental destruction and human rights abuses linked to resource extraction. Since 2005, Tom has supported investigations, advocacy, and coalition-building across environmental, human rights, and anti-corruption movements. He has previously held roles at Global Witness, Friends of the Earth, and Amnesty International.

Climate Justice Alliance
Apr 5th, 2022
Rainforest Action Network launched 2022 edition of the Banking on Climate Chaos on Mar 29th 22'.

Last week, Rainforest Action Network and five other civil society organisations released the 2022 edition of the Banking on Climate Chaos, endorsed by more than 500 organizations.

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