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Thriving Communities: National and International Environmental Grantmaking

See Funder Details for: The New York Community Trust
live
Deadline: Feb 28, 2025

categories applicant type

Government Entity
Indigenous Group
Nonprofit

categories applicant type ineligibility

categories country of field work preference

categories country of residency

United States

categories country of residency preference

categories ecosystem

categories featured set

categories field of work

Climate Change Resilience
Energy
Environment
Environmental Chemistry & Toxicology
Environmental Conservation
Environmental Health
Green Infrastructure
Sustainability
Sustainable Agriculture & Agroecology
Urban Planning

categories funding uses

Education / Outreach
Project / Program
Research

categories location of field work

categories must travel to

categories specific faiths

created at

2016-07-06T19:49:57Z

exclusive to minorities

False

external reference id

funder

funder created at

2016-07-20T21:26:28Z

funder ein

133062214

funder is custom

False

funder name

The New York Community Trust

funder updated at

2024-09-23T17:02:18Z

Funding Cycles

Interval:
once
Letter Of Inquiry
date
Expires: Sep 30, 2024
Full Proposal
invitation
Expires: Jan 1, 1970
Interval:
once
Letter Of Inquiry
date
Expires: Feb 28, 2025
Full Proposal
invitation
Expires: Jan 1, 1970

gender

hidden account wide

False

is custom

False

is limited submission

limited submission requirements

overview

"

Note: The National and International Environment Program starts the process with an LOI, which can be submitted through the Grants Portal (opens in a new tab)during three-week windows each fall (late September) and winter (late February).

National Environment

Program goals: To mitigate climate change, make communities more resilient to climate change, protect public health from the hazards of toxic chemicals and pollutants, and preserve biological diversity.

Grants are made to promote more environmentally sustainable, resilient, and just communities that:

  • Mitigate climate change by:
    • promoting energy efficiency and alternative sources of energy for buildings;
    • shifting to electric or low-emission vehicles and greater use of mass transit;
    • promoting a smarter, more resilient grid and distributed (on site) generation;
    • reducing emissions from existing fossil fuel-powered facilities and extraction activities; and
    • establishing regional programs, performance standards, and regulations that help reduce emissions.
  • Make communities, especially the most disadvantaged, more resilient to a changing climate by:
    • creating infrastructure that reduces storm-water run-off and absorbs storm surges;
    • protecting shoreline communities by conserving or enhancing natural barriers;
    • encouraging more sustainable building design and land use through policy reforms; and
    • better planning and preparation for weather-related emergencies, especially for low-income and other vulnerable residents.
  • Protect public health from the hazards of toxic pollutants by:
    • supporting targeted scientific research that can be used to develop policy;
    • promoting safer chemical and heavy metal policies and practices, especially for infants, children and other vulnerable people;
    • eliminating toxic chemicals from products through market campaigns focused on retailers and manufacturers;
    • enhancing protections for low-income communities near polluting facilities; and
    • minimizing the hazards of new and expanded fossil fuel extraction on nearby communities.
  • Preserve biological diversity through habitat conservation by:
    • establishing, enhancing, and monitoring wildlife migration corridors; and
    • supporting functional connectivity between fragmented habitat that enables species to move and live safely.

We encourage initiatives that cut across these program areas, especially those focused on smart growth, sustainable agriculture and regional food systems, and sustainable production.

International Environment

Each year, we make only two or three international grants to U.S. organizations that are building the capacity of government, academic institutions, private sector entities, and nonprofits to:

  • Protect biodiversity;
  • Improve environmental health; and
  • Reduce greenhouse gases around the world.
"

slug

new-york-community-trust-national-and-international-environmental-grant

updated at

2025-01-13T13:06:04Z