
Alana Lea
Alana Lea is a voice for the rainforest, born in Brazil's Mata Atlântica. She's a global citizen, having developed a reputation as a leader in Brazil and France for her environmental art and advocacy.
Her botanical and environmental art has been exibited in the Smithsonian, the Museum of Natural History, the Bruce Museum of Arts and Sciences and at two climate change conferences. She illustrates her talks with lavish Keynote presentations to take you on a visual journey.
Through her social enterprise, Rainforest ECO Enterprises, Alana speaks to inspire genuine hope for global warming solutions. Her US-based non-profit, ECOfloresta, is the funding partner of the iGiveTrees project in Brazil.
She has spoken at the climate change conference COP22 as well as international schools and training events. She's also the author of a multimedia book "Trees of Transformation," published by Waterside Press, with new titles in development for 2018-2019.
Alana Lea is a voice for the rainforest, born in Brazil's Mata Atlântica. She's a global citizen, having developed a reputation as a leader in Brazil and France for her environmental art and advocacy.
Her botanical and environmental art has been exibited in the Smithsonian, the Museum of Natural History, the Bruce Museum of Arts and Sciences and at two climate change conferences. She illustrates her talks with lavish Keynote presentations to take you on a visual journey.
Through her social enterprise, Rainforest ECO Enterprises, Alana speaks to inspire genuine hope for global warming solutions. Her US-based non-profit, ECOfloresta, is the funding partner of the iGiveTrees project in Brazil.
She has spoken at the climate change conference COP22 as well as international schools and training events. She's also the author of a multimedia book "Trees of Transformation," published by Waterside Press, with new titles in development for 2018-2019.
A Powerful Drop
Trees of Transformation
Does poking a seed into hard, dry ground by hand or shot from a plane, really result in trees that grow? Or is it mainly marketing to people in need of a quick fix?
Learn what is really required if we are to regenerate our Earth, to mitigate and eventually reverse global warming. It is possible, and it is happening...
