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Bezos Earth Fund Coastal Protection Grants is a grant from the Bezos Earth Fund that funds marine conservation and community-led stewardship across the Eastern Tropical Pacific region. The $24. 5 million announcement supports park rangers, coastal communities, and local organizations in Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador to protect key marine areas.
Funded activities include improving on-the-water safety, expanding community-led protection, and advancing science-driven decision-making. Eligible applicants include local organizations and communities in the four target countries working on coastal and marine conservation.
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Bezos Earth Fund Announces $24. 5 Million for… | Bezos Earth Fund Bezos Earth Fund Announces $24. 5 Million for Coastal Protection and Stewardship Across the Eastern Tropical Pacific New grants support community-led stewardship and advance science-driven decision-making across Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and Ecuador The Bezos Earth Fund today announced $24.
5 million in grants to help park rangers, coastal communities, and local organizations protect key marine areas across the Eastern Tropical Pacific. The new funding will improve on-the-water safety and planning, expand community-led protection in nursery habitats, and strengthen the science used to guide conservation decisions in Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador.
These grants nearly double the Earth Fund’s total investment in the region to more than $60 million. Since 2021, the four countries have designated more than 154,000 square miles (400,000 km²) of new marine protected areas, nearly tripling regional protection.
Panama, Costa Rica, and Colombia have each protected more than 30 percent of their national waters, and Ecuador has expanded protections across critical offshore and coastal zones. Together, they are working to connect protected areas across borders to build one of the world’s largest coordinated marine conservation efforts.
“These waters are home to endangered turtles, schools of tuna, and the only places on Earth where hammerhead sharks still gather in the thousands. We’re seeing that when communities are equipped with the right tools, they protect these species – and the ocean comes back to life,” said Tom Taylor , President and CEO of the Bezos Earth Fund.
"That’s what this investment from the Bezos Earth Fund is about: supporting the people who do the work and giving nature the chance to thrive. ” [Photo credit: Global Fishing Watch] The new grants will help patrol teams plan their work more effectively and use reliable information to guide day-to-day decisions.
Many protected areas in the region are remote and difficult to monitor, and park rangers often rely on limited data when assessing where to focus their time. The grants will provide training and practical tools that help them work more safely on the water and coordinate efforts across borders.
“With the support of partners like the Bezos Earth Fund, Panama has strengthened the protection of Coiba National Park in close collaboration with local communities. We have already safeguarded more than half of our marine territory and reaffirmed our commitment to ocean conservation,” said Juan Carlos Navarro, Minister of Environment of Panama. “Our work goes beyond borders.
Together with Costa Rica, Colombia, and Ecuador, we are advancing the Eastern Tropical Pacific Marine Corridor as the world’s first cross-border Marine Biosphere Reserve of its kind – a clear demonstration that lasting conservation is achievable when nations join forces.
” Many of the region’s most important species begin life in coastal mangroves, estuaries, and sheltered bays and later migrate through offshore corridors that span national borders. The grants will help community organizations protect and manage these nursery areas and will also strengthen the long-term monitoring needed to understand how sharks, sea turtles, whales, and other species move across the region.
This work includes tracking migration routes, integrating those data into government planning tools, and building on research already underway, such as more than 1,200 underwater camera deployments and environmental DNA sampling to monitor biodiversity trends. Long-term protection depends on reliable funding that helps communities and agencies care for these areas year after year.
Part of the new investment will support locally led financing models in coastal nurseries, and this work builds on recent progress across the region. Here is a closer look at the grants supporting this work: Safeguarding Coastal Nurseries | A $13.
85 million grant to Re:wild will support local and regional organizations, including Fondo Acción in Colombia, ANCON in Panama, and Krucial in Ecuador, to support the creation of new coastal reserves, strengthen existing ones in nursery zones where marine life begins, and secure long-term financing so protections last.
Understanding Migratory Species | A $1 million grant to MigraMar will expand long-term monitoring of sharks, turtles, whales, and tuna across the region. By understanding where species travel and gather, scientists and managers can make better decisions about where protections are needed and how wildlife is recovering.
Smarter Patrol Planning | A $4 million grant to Global Fishing Watch will help patrol teams work more safely and effectively by giving them access to reliable satellite information and easy-to-use planning tools. Training across all four countries will help officers use this information in real time so they can focus their time on the water where it matters most. Defending Protected Waters | A $5.
65 million grant to WildAid will provide park rangers with the equipment and hands-on training that make their daily work safer and more efficient. The support will help teams navigate remote areas with greater confidence and ensure they have what they need to care for their waters over the long term.
The Bezos Earth Fund is helping transform the fight against climate change with the largest ever philanthropic commitment to climate and nature protection. Jeff Bezos has committed $10 billion in this decisive decade to protect nature and address climate change. By providing funding and expertise, we partner with organizations to accelerate innovation, break down barriers to success and create a more equitable and sustainable world.
Join us in our mission to create a world where people prosper in harmony with nature. How to Make AI a Force for Good in Climate Bezos Earth Fund to accelerate 48 transformative climate and nature solutions in collaboration with The Earthshot Prize Nuclear Scaling Initiative secures $3. 5M to advance U.S. reactor orderbook
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Park rangers, coastal communities, and local organizations in Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, and Ecuador. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates $24.5 million announced in December 2025 Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
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The AI for Climate and Nature Grand Challenge, launched by the Bezos Earth Fund with up to $100 million in total funding, uses a two-phase award process to accelerate AI-driven solutions for the world's most pressing environmental challenges. In Phase I, 24 organizations across four categories—sustainable proteins, biodiversity conservation, power grid optimization, and wildcard solutions—each received $50,000 seed grants and participated in Innovation Sprints with private-sector mentors. In Phase II, up to 15 of the most promising initiatives will receive $2 million implementation grants over two years. Phase I recipients include Cornell University, The Nature Conservancy, Smithsonian Institution, Yale University, National Audubon Society, and others spanning 501(c)(3) organizations and global academic institutions. The program targets transformative applications of AI across food systems, biodiversity monitoring, energy grid decarbonization, and novel environmental solutions through 2027.
Bezos Earth Fund AI for Climate and Nature Grand Challenge is sponsored by Bezos Earth Fund. The AI for Climate and Nature Grand Challenge, launched by the Bezos Earth Fund with up to $100 million in total funding, uses a two-phase award process to accelerate AI-driven solutions for the world's most pressing environmental challenges.
EPA is seeking insightful, expert, and cost-effective applications from eligible applicants to provide the Chesapeake Bay Program’s non-federal partners with technical analysis and programmatic evaluation support related to water quality modeling and monitoring and spatial systems to manage, analyze, and map environmental data. The project assists the partners in meeting their restoration and protection goals and in increasing the transfer of scientific understanding to the Chesapeake Bay Program modeling, monitoring, and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) activities. The recipient will support modeling, monitoring, and GIS programs needed to explain and communicate the health of and changes in the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem. Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-R3-CBP-23-18. Assistance Listing: 66.466. Funding Instrument: CA. Category: ENV. Award Amount: Up to $5.3M per award.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs is sponsored by Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA SBIR program supports the development and commercialization of innovative environmental technologies that address the Agency's mission. This includes projects focused on climate change solutions, air quality, circular economy/sustainable materials, and other environmental threats.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program Phase I is sponsored by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA SBIR Phase I Solicitation invites small businesses to submit proposals for projects addressing critical environmental challenges. Awards are for six months to demonstrate proof of concept. Key focus areas include Clean and Safe Water, Air Quality and Climate, Homeland Security, Circular Economy/Sustainable Materials, and Safer Chemicals.