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Sustainable Cities program - Transforming Transportation is sponsored by The Summit Foundation. This program supports equitable, community-led programs and policies that improve well-being and catalyze climate action by transforming transportation. It focuses on expanding transit networks, designing streets for walking and biking, electrifying transportation, and promoting new forms of clean, shared mobility.
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Sustainable Cities - The Summit Foundation The Sustainable Cities program seeks to significantly reduce carbon emissions and pollution through city-led, transformative climate action. With more than four-fifths of Americans living in cities, the ways we make communities more livable allows for enormous progress in addressing climate change.
The Summit Foundation supports equitable, community-led programs and policies that improve well-being and catalyze the bold vision and action necessary to solve climate change. The solutions exist to halve our greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and achieve full carbon neutrality by 2050. Cities are economic hubs, seats of government, and laboratories for equitable, community-led change.
Our grantees lead this change by working with cities to expand and electrify transit networks, promote alternatives to single-occupancy vehicles, remove fossil fuels from buildings, and give people choice in how they power their lives.
Transforming Transportation The United States’s transportation sector contributes more than 30 percent of annual carbon emissions and generates pollution that leads to significant respiratory and cardiovascular disease burdens.
Our grantees are creating solutions at meaningful scale: expanding transit networks, ensuring city streets are designed for walking and biking, electrifying transportation, and promoting new forms of clean, shared mobility for everyone.
Decarbonizing the Built Environment The U.S.’s building stock accounts for roughly one-third of our annual carbon emissions, and pollution from fossil fuel use in homes, schools, and workplaces exacerbates respiratory illness, fires, and other hazards. We support measures to make our buildings more efficient and carbon-free so that we can eliminate carbon emissions and indoor pollutants that put human health at risk.
We focus our grantmaking on high-value, catalytic opportunities to rapidly decarbonize the built environment, ensure cities and suburbs can transition to clean energy sources, create carbon-neutral building stock, and electrify transit and transportation for all. With temperatures and sea levels rising every year, time is not on humanity’s side.
Nevertheless, the solutions exist to halve our greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, radically reduce air pollution, and achieve full carbon neutrality by 2050. These solutions are possible today, but a successful response to the climate crisis will require a transformation of our energy systems and land use patterns.
It is also important to recognize that the climate crisis is intimately linked to social and economic inequality and will require solutions that address the underlying systems that perpetuate these inequalities. We fund nonprofit organizations that drive concrete, actionable solutions to our climate crisis, focusing on grantees whose work centers equity and delivers significant reductions in fossil fuel use.
Our grantees are grassroots groups, environmental justice organizations, community-based organizations, and communications experts. We prioritize funding organizations comprising and working in frontline communities and entities focused on equitable solutions to our changing climate.
While our work focuses on the United States, our grantees are global in scope: we believe we must partner with and share ideas, models, and resources with our sister cities across the planet if we are to combat a crisis that affects everyone on the planet. Our grantees’ work focuses on cities and suburbs, but the policies they advance aren’t just local: we support work that is statewide and even national in scale.
We support grantees and projects that challenge existing power structures inhibiting climate progress and organizations whose work is timely, measurable, and scalable. Given the urgent nature of the threat we face, we are solutions-oriented, science-minded, and focused on the geographies and issue areas where our grantees can make the most impact in the shortest amount of time.
Transportation for America Uses Artificial Intelligence to Analyze IIJA Spending Together for Brothers Wins Fare-Free Transit in Albuquerque Summit Grantees Discuss the Future of Transportation Advocacy at Funder Summit Greater Greater Washington Shows Us How to Travel From Virginia to Massachusetts . . .
On Commuter Rail Summit Grantees Win as New York City’s Congestion Pricing Program Clears Final Hurdles Fast Company Honors Stand. earth’s SAFE Cities Campaign Preferences Reject Accept All Toggle Essential Essential Toggle Statistics Statistics Toggle Google Analytics Google Analytics Google Analytics is a powerful tool that tracks and analyzes website traffic for informed marketing decisions. Service URL: policies.
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According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Nonprofit organizations that drive concrete, actionable solutions to the climate crisis, focusing on grantees whose work centers equity and delivers significant reductions in fossil fuel use, prioritizing organizations comprising and working in frontline communities. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Sustainable Cities program - Transforming Transportation is funded by The Summit Foundation. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
Parkland Acquisitions and Renovations for Communities (PARC) Grant Program is a grant from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs that funds the acquisition and development of public parkland and outdoor recreational facilities. Eligible applicants include Massachusetts cities of any size and towns with 35,000 or more year-round residents that have an established park or recreation commission and an approved Open Space and Recreation Plan. Smaller communities may qualify under small town, regional, or statewide provisions. Awards reach up to $425,000, with a deadline of July 8, 2025. The program supports community green space, conservation, and recreational access across the Commonwealth.
Bats for the Future Fund is a grant from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF), in partnership with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, that funds efforts to slow or halt the spread of white-nose syndrome (WNS) disease and support the recovery of affected bat populations in North America. Funded projects may address disease treatment, habitat conservation, population monitoring, or public education strategies that contribute to bat species survival. Additional support is provided by NextEra Energy Resources through its charitable foundation. Eligible applicants include researchers, nonprofits, universities, and government agencies with relevant conservation expertise. Awards range from $50,000 to $250,000, with the 2025 deadline on August 14, 2025.
Northern California Environmental Grassroots Fund is a grant from Rose Foundation for Communities and the Environment that funds small and emerging grassroots organizations in California building climate resilience and advancing environmental justice. The fund prioritizes groups rooted in historically marginalized communities, including BIPOC, frontline, and low-income populations, with strong advocacy, organizing, and outreach components. Eligible applicants are nonprofit organizations or fiscally-sponsored groups with annual income or expenses of $150,000 or less; government agencies, colleges, and universities are not eligible. Awards typically range from $4,000 to $7,500, with a maximum of $7,500.