Sun.Star Pampanga

Leonardo DiCaprio foundation awards $20M in eco-grants

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From lion recovery and mangrove restoratio­n to the defense of indigenous rights and better access to affordable solar energy, the actor announced the grants ahead of his appearance at a climate change conference at Yale University. He planned to use the appearance to urge more immediate steps to reduce the world's reliance on fossil fuels in favor of renewable energy so u r ces.

"Our challenge is to find new ways to power our lives, employ millions of people and turn every individual into an advocate for clean air and drinkable water," DiCaprio said in a statement. "We must demand that politician­s accept climate science and make bold commitment­s before it is too late."

The money increases the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation's giving to $80 million since 1998, the organizati­on said in a statement.

Among nearly $3.6 million in new climate grants, for instance, is support of community organizati­ons in the United States fighting for 100 percent renewable energy, money for mitigating climate change through mangrove re-planting in Somalia and a project that backs legal action holding major corporatio­ns in the fossil fuel industry liable for the effects of pollution.

The foundation also granted about $6.4 million for wildlife and land conservati­on projects. That work includes lion and elephant restoratio­n and protection, conservati­on research in the Brazilian Amazon and a partnershi­p with the local Maasai community in Kenya to conserve critical wildlife and wilderness there.

California Waterkeepe­rs, a group that helps protect the state's coastal waters, and Ocean 5, which establishe­s marine reserves and combats illegal fishing in all five oceans around the globe, are among other recipients.

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