A Green councillor has urged officials to start using a “green” search engine.

Councillor Hannah Clare wants Ecosia to be the default search engine on all Brighton and Hove City Council laptops and in libraries and schools too, replacing the likes of Google.

Ecosia donates at least 80 per cent of its profits to non-profit organisations which focus on planting trees.

Cllr Clare said: “If something really simple has the potential to do something really useful and really big, why wouldn’t we do it?”

She told the council’s policy and resources committee she had been inspired by a student campaign at Sussex University which had switched its default search to Ecosia.

Since 2009, Ecosia has planted more than 70 million trees, funding projects across the world, including in areas of deforestation in Indonesia.

Cllr Clare said: “Indonesia has lost an estimated 25 per cent of its rainforests thanks to palm oil plantations which has then affected wildlife as a result – orangutans being a key example.

“And in response to (President) Bolsonaro burning the Amazon rainforest, they have pledged to plant two million trees in Brazil next year – double what they did this year.

“We’re not going to save the entire rainforest by changing our search engine. But we can have an impact.”

She said the internet was the biggest coal-fired machine on earth.

She added: “We’re not going to stop climate breakdown through adjusting our internet usage.

“But we can make a dent through moving towards something as simple as planting trees.”

The council is currently bringing in Microsoft Windows 10 software across its IT systems and said that changes would be considered once this was complete.