Showing posts with label prize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prize. Show all posts

The Zayed Future Energy Prize for Renewable Energy and Sustainability

The Zayed Future Energy Prize for renewable energy and sustainability began in 2008 and has been awarded annually to large corporations, individuals, small businesses and non-government organizations that have displayed evident effort in advancing renewable energy and sustainable technologies. The 2013 edition of the Zayed Future Energy Prize for renewable energy and sustainability will for the first time offer a special prize for high schools starting to engage in the sustainability business. Renewable energy prize opens $500,000 award in the high school category.  This new category will award $500,000 to be divided among five regions – the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania.

High schools from around the world can submit a business plan outlining how they would use the prize to raise awareness on the importance of sustainability and to improve their school’s environmental footprint. “Unlike any of our other categories – the High School Prize is about a promise – we ask schools around the world to submit projects for funding consideration,” said Dr. Nawal Al-Hosany, director of the Zayed Future Energy Prize.

Submissions for all categories of the 2013 edition of the Zayed Future Energy Prize close on July 16, 2012. The previous edition of the prize attracted a record 425 applications from 71 countries.

Main awards The prize will have four other main categories. These are “Large Corporation,” “SME,” “NGO” and “Lifetime Achievement.” The Large Corporations category is open to companies with a focus on renewable energy and sustainability. Last year’s winner was Schneider Electric, a France-based specialist in energy management. Schneider Electric works across numerous sectors including renewable energy, water, electricity and green buildings to ensure resource efficiency and sustainability.

Previous editions of the prize combined the S.M.E. and N.G.O. category, but the 2013 edition will separate the two. Prizes of $1.5 million each will be given to the chosen S.M.E. and N.G.O. that will be judged as having made a clear impact, either through disseminating a particular solution or through furthering knowledge, awareness, policy development or technology. Last year’s winner was the Carbon Disclosure Project, a British organization that measures, discloses, manages and shares environmental information. The organization uses market-based tools to solve environmental issues.

The Lifetime Achievement Award, which is also worth $500,000, goes to an individual who has made an exceptional impact on the industry with personal achievements over a prolonged period of involvement. The 2012 edition gave the Lifetime Achievement Award to United States physicist Dr. Ashok Gadgil for his sustainable humanitarian work in Darfur. Dr. Gadgil invented the energy-efficient “Berkeley-Darfur” cooking stove, which reduces need for firewood by 55 percent. He is also well-known for developing “UV Waterworks,” a technology to inexpensively disinfect drinking water in developing countries.

Managed by Masdar, the Zayed Future Energy Prize was created to honor the founding president of the United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, who advocated for sustainable development and environmental stewardship.


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Goldman Environmental Prize Winners for 2012

The Goldman Environmental Foundation has announced the six recipients of the 2012 Goldman Environmental Prize. Now in its 23rd year, the Goldman Environmental Prize is awarded annually to grassroots environmental heroes from each of the world’s six inhabited continental regions (Africa, Asia, Europe, Island Nations, North America, and South America). It is the largest award for grassroots activism, with an individual cash prize of $150,000. The Goldman Environmental Prize was established in 1989 by late San Francisco civic leaders and philanthropists Richard and Rhoda Goldman. Prize winners are selected by an international jury from confidential nominations submitted by a worldwide network of environmental organizations and individuals. The Prize recognizes achievements in forest protection, desert lake conservation, nickel mining opposition, pesticide regulation and fighting oil development in Arctic waters. This group of brave individuals work to protect the environment and their communities despite opposition and even threats to their personal health and safety. 2012 recipients come from Argentina, China, Kenya, Philippines, Russia, and the United States. This year’s winners are:

IKAL ANGELEI, Kenya Risking her life, Ikal Angelei is fighting the construction of the massive Gibe 3 Dam that would block access to water for indigenous communities around Lake Turkana.

MA JUN, China Ma Jun is working with corporations to clean up their practices with an online database and digital map that shows Chinese citizens which factories are violating environmental regulations in their country.

EVGENIA CHIRIKOVA, Russia Challenging rampant political corruption, Evgenia Chirikova is mobilizing her fellow Russian citizens to demand the rerouting of a highway that would bisect Khimki Forest, Moscow’s “green lungs.”

EDWIN GARIGUEZ, Philippines A Catholic priest, Father Edwin Gariguez is leading a grassroots movement against a large-scale nickel mine to protect Mindoro Island’s biodiversity and its indigenous people.

CAROLINE CANNON, USA Caroline Cannon is bringing the voice and perspective of her Inupiat community in Point Hope to the battle to keep Arctic waters safe from offshore oil and gas drilling.

SOFIA GATICA, Argentina A mother whose infant died as a result of pesticide poisoning, Sofía Gatica is organizing local women to stop indiscriminate spraying of toxic agrochemicals in neighboring soy fields.

For more information on the Goldman Prize click here.

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