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Find similar grantsClimate Curve Prize: Methane is sponsored by Global Warming Mitigation Project. Awards funding for innovative projects aimed at reducing methane emissions.
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Climate Curve Prize: Methane | Climate Curve Catalyzing solutions to one of the biggest climate challenges of our time. Explore the Prize Categories Eligibility & Requirements Frequently Asked Questions The Climate Curve Prize: Methane will be the first prize to bolster global solutions for methane mitigation in food and waste systems. Methane is a highly potent greenhouse gas — more than 80 times stronger than CO₂ .
It is responsible for 45% of global temperature rise since the Industrial Revolution and is a major driver of premature deaths linked to air pollution. Agriculture and waste are one of the world’s biggest contributors to methane emissions, yet funding for methane mitigation in this sector is well behind the curve.
Methane mitigation offers one of the fastest, most cost-effective opportunities for slowing climate change: investments in methane reduction have the potential to deliver 118M jobs and could unlock $700 billion in global economic value from food and waste system innovations by 2050. Premature deaths globally attributed to tropospheric ozone, of which methane is a key precursor.
Of global human-caused methane emissions comes from food and waste system. About the Climate Curve Prize: Methane The Climate Curve Prize: Methane, launched by Climate Curve (formerly Global Warming Mitigation Project) with support from the Global Methane Hub, is the first global prize dedicated to accelerating methane emissions mitigation solutions for food and waste systems.
Inspired by the success of the Keeling Curve Prize, this initiative will build a portfolio of breakthrough approaches to address methane emissions, starting with agriculture and waste. Each year, a team of diverse, expert analysts, advisors, and judges will identify and support innovators whose work demonstrates the greatest potential for real-world impact.
Late February: Applications open worldwide April 17: Applications close at 11:59 PM IDLW (UTC–12) July 1: 16 finalists announced September: 8 laureates announced and awarded $25,000 each to support their work at New York Climate Week Click the icons to learn more about each category What Sets this Prize Apart?
First-of-its-kind, sector-specific prize for methane mitigation Transparent, application-based process with rigorous, scientific-based vetting Strong network of global partners and support for all applicants Tailored, trust-based funding with no strings attached Focus on building sustainable communities and long-term impact Opportunities for Innovators & Change-makers Are you working on a solution to reduce methane emissions?
The Climate Curve Prize: Methane offers global visibility, access to a community of climate leaders, and the chance to join a network of innovators scaling transformative solutions. The application cycle will begin February 2026. Opportunities for Funders & Partners By supporting the Climate Curve Prize: Methane, you can help accelerate one of the most powerful levers for climate impact.
Sponsors receive global recognition, exclusive invitations to high-level events, and the opportunity to directly empower the world’s leading methane innovators. Potential global economic value added by food and waste system methane innovations by 2050 (USD). Projected jobs created through investing in methane-mitigating solutions for food and waste systems.
Interested in being a difference maker for the planet? Reach out! Partnership Makes It Possible The Climate Curve Prize: Methane is supported by the Global Methane Hub Climate Curve is proud to have the support of the Global Methane Hub (GMH) for the launch of this one-of-a-kind methane prize.
GMH is a global leader in the methane mitigation space. They are building a global network of scientists, experts, activists, policymakers, and philanthropists, all pushing in the same direction toward the single goal of cutting down methane emissions. Honoring a Pioneer.
Carrying His Legacy. Manfredi Caltagirone was a visionary leader in the global effort to reduce methane pollution. As Director of the International Methane Emissions Observatory (IMEO), he helped build the world’s first truly comprehensive system for tracking methane emissions — transforming satellite data and on-the-ground measurements into trusted, actionable insight.
His work empowered governments, industry, and civil society to set credible targets and take meaningful action. This prize honors Manfredi’s legacy by carrying forward the mission he championed with such resolve: accelerating real, measurable methane reductions to protect our climate. Manfredi believed that lasting methane mitigation depends not only on technology, but on trust and collaboration across sectors.
His clarity of purpose, generosity, and unyielding commitment inspired a global community that continues to grow. Manfredi had a clear vision: if methane emissions were made visible, action would become inevitable — and he was right. Once you see images of avoidable methane “bombs,” you can’t unsee them.
That visibility empowers companies to improve their operations, civil society to demand accountability, communities to show how fossil fuel extraction harms both the climate and the air they breathe, and governments to regulate not only domestic methane emissions, but also those embedded in the oil and gas they import. This catalytic vision is one that GMH shares — and one we see driving real change every day.
CEO of the Global Methane Hub
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Nonprofit organizations worldwide working on methane reduction projects. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
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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.
Clean Ports Program is sponsored by Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The Clean Ports Program provides funding for zero-emission port equipment and infrastructure, as well as climate and air quality planning at U.S. ports. It aims to reduce diesel pollution and build a foundation for the port sector to transition to fully zero-emissions operations.