Winners of Climate Change Awards soon announced
"We are the first award of this kind in Africa that recognise, reward, motivate and celebrate businesses, communities, schools and individuals," says Jeunesse Park, founder of Food & Trees for Africa and the CCLA. "The organisation is moving from strength to strength, expanding but also developing as we progress, now with more categories, evolving judging methodologies and growing interest from across the board."
Climate change a bare minimum
Ant Dane, consultant at Incite Sustainability and one of the seven judges drawn from across the environmental, business, and non-governmental organisation sectors says: "Innovation, scale of impact and relevance within the South African context are crucial criteria in the judging process. Innovative ideas must prove some measure of success because, while encouraging, without it they cannot demonstrate leadership. The resources available to individuals, groups, and organisations are also considered for scale of impact. As a bare minimum, a successful entry must demonstrate good understanding of climate change with a direct link to one or more of the challenges posed by climate change."
Ingrid Mech, of Global Carbon Exchange, adds: "Every entry is uniquely significant, whether it be through adaptation or mitigation, in addressing the effects of climate change. There are many entries that are extremely meaningful, but they face fierce competition from larger scale entries that have even more impact, and that makes the judging process extremely difficult."
Projects completed with minimum funds
Judges note that entrants in the private sector use their climate change response programmes as differentiators and that they demonstrate innovation in stakeholder engagement and change management. Schools and communities tend to show the ability to creatively execute their projects with limited funds, particularly in challenging circumstances.
The winners will be announced at the gala event on 29 March at the Sandton Sun Hotel. The awards offer individuals and groups R35 000 in gift vouchers from Pick n Pay, R100 000 from SA Post Office, financial assistance for waste minimisation category winners from Amalgamated Beverage Industries, and educational courses from Global Carbon Exchange.