
Cyprus Volunteers Plant 70 Trees After Wildfire Recovery
Thirty-eight volunteers, including company employees and their families, planted trees in fire-damaged areas of Cyprus using innovative water-saving technology. All trees from a previous planting effort survived, proving the method works.
When wildfires tore through Souni, Cyprus last year, the landscape looked scarred and barren. But on May 23, hope sprouted as 38 volunteers gathered to help nature heal faster.
Exinity employees brought their families to plant trees alongside the Andrey & Julia Dashin Foundation. Together with environmental group ECOmbare, they installed 70 Groasis Waterboxxes, a smart system that helps young trees thrive in dry conditions while using far less water than traditional methods.
The timing couldn't be better. New vegetation is already pushing through the burned ground naturally, showing the ecosystem's resilience. These strategic plantings will speed up recovery and strengthen the area's biodiversity for years to come.
The Groasis Waterboxx technology solves a crucial challenge in Mediterranean climates. The innovative system achieves high survival rates even in degraded soil, making reforestation efforts far more effective in drought-prone regions.

ECOmbare will nurture the seedlings for the next 18 months, conducting regular visits for watering, maintenance, and replanting when needed. The organization will share progress updates to track how the young forest develops.
The Ripple Effect: This initiative builds on remarkable success from November 2025, when the Exinity executive team planted trees using the same method. Recent inspections revealed every single tree survived, a perfect 100% success rate that demonstrates both the technology's effectiveness and the power of committed environmental care.
The project shows what happens when businesses invest in their communities beyond profit. By inviting employees and families to participate, Exinity turned environmental restoration into a shared experience that builds awareness across generations.
"Environmental responsibility is a shared commitment," said Andrey Dashin, who joined the planting effort. "Initiatives like this demonstrate the positive impact that can be achieved when communities and organizations come together around a common purpose."
The foundation has supported causes across Cyprus since 2014, focusing on social welfare, healthcare, education, and environmental protection. Their work emphasizes that lasting change requires both immediate action and long-term dedication.
As Cyprus prepares for another fire season, these 70 new trees represent more than reforestationâthey're seeds of community resilience taking root.
Based on reporting by Google News - Reforestation
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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