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The Bullitt Environmental Fellowship is a
two-year, $50,000/year fellowship for graduate students interested in
pursuing leadership positions within the environmental field.
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An essay by Denis Hayes. Cascadia, the Northwest corner of the United States and the Southwest corner of Canada, is emerging as ground zero for sustainable development.
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Notices of funding resources outside the Bullitt Foundation.
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- Info
Grantee Profile: Earth Economics
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Grants
| Year |
Value |
Project |
Description |
| 2011 |
$50,000 |
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To further develop strategic partnerships with and among local government and private sector stakeholders in key Puget Sound watersheds, particularly the Green-Duwamish Water Resource Inventory Area 9.
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| 2011 |
$50,000 |
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To support the first phase of an initiative to develop a new financial model that monetizes the social and environmental benefits inherent in "deep green" buildings.
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| 2011 |
$45,000 |
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For continued support to Earth Economics to partner with Cushman & Wakefield, Autopoiesis, and Jason Twill to merge the theoretical approaches of ecological economics with the practical techniques of real estate investment and valuation practice. The team will peer review the recently released report "The Economics of Change: Catalyzing the Investment Shift Toward a Restorative Built Environment," refine the Integrated Real Estate Modeling Tool, and create a digest version of the report.
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| 2010 |
$16,000 |
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For general support.
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| 2009 |
$25,000 |
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To conduct an ecosystem service analysis of the Snoqualmie River Watershed in collaboration with Stewardship Partners and the Trust for Public Land.
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| 2008 |
$25,000 |
Basel Action Network |
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To launch a Washington state-based national electronic waste chain-of-custody certification program to keep equipment out of landfills, eliminate export of e-waste to developing countries, and end the exploitation of prison labor used to dismantle these products.
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122 S Jackson, Suite 320
Seattle, WA
98104
(206) 652-5555
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| 2005 |
$20,000 |
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The grant supported the efforts of Earth Economics to promote ecological economics through collaboration with government officials and other nonprofits, media outreach, and public education.
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| 2004 |
$15,000 |
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The grant supported Earth Economics' work on citizen training related to critical area ordinance updates, advancement of watershed valuation efforts for salmon protection, and skillshares workshops.
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| 2002 |
$25,000 |
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The Tides Center strengthens the roots of the social change movement by partnering quality management services with creative programmatic endeavors. It serves as the fiscal sponsor of the Asia-Pacific Environmental Exchange, which is devoted to promoting ecosystem health and ecological economics and to halting the globalization of unsustainable economic policies. The grant supports two projects: one focusing on skill-sharing ecological economics workshops in the Seattle area, and the other on a campaign to preserve habitat in the Carbon River watershed.
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| 2000 |
$10,000 |
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Tides Center actively promotes change toward a healthy society„one founded on principles of social justice, broadly shared economic opportunity, a robust democratic process, and sustainable environmental practices. The grant supports a project conducted by the Asia-Pacific Environment Exchange to teach activists how to strengthen their campaigns with effective economic and ecosystem health arguments. The project includes a tangible application of the skills in a campaign to protect landscapes in the riparian zone of the Carbon River immediately west of Mount Rainier National Park.
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