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How Philanthropy Can Help Save Our Democracy AND Protect the Climate

Date: August 4, 2022

Paige Brown

Program Director, Climate and Energy Funders Group

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As the director of the Climate and Energy Funders Group (CEFG), one part of my job is fervently making the case for more donors to fund climate and clean energy work. We absolutely need more funders in the space. Yet, I understand how donors can be torn by the urgent need of a number of critical problems and crisis, such as ocean and marine issues, land and freshwater, environmental health, sustainable agriculture, immigration rights, LGBTQ+ rights, and gun safety. And we all make the often-correct case that our issues need more resources.

Having said that, climate change is an existential threat that is hurting the most vulnerable communities in the U.S. and globally hardest. Species will go extinct. Human misery from hunger, weather chaos, heat, lack of water, and more, will come. Climate change is already underway and will impact nearly every aspect of most people’s lives. Yet, we show little sign of undertaking even minimal necessary effort.

Encouragingly, though, CEP’s new report, Much Alarm, Less Action: Foundations & Climate Change concludes that climate and non-climate funders overwhelmingly believe that climate change is an urgent problem, and that philanthropy has an important role to play. So, how might we mobilize together across issues to address climate change more effectively?

One critical avenue is to work together, across issues, to protect our democracy. American democracy has been in decline for many years, as the racial justice movement has laid bare. The full-on attacks on our citizenship rights threatens progress on every issue we care about. While I whole-heartedly agree that more climate philanthropy is urgently needed, we must work across issues to stop these attacks and build support for a robust democracy or we will fail, across issues, to make progress.

For example, according to the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, 72 percent of Americans believe climate change is happening, 65 percent are worried about it, 72 percent want CO2 regulated, and 77 percent want more renewable research. Yet, here we are with rising emissions, rising sea levels, more catastrophic droughts, fires, and storms. Our deficient democracy undergirds these successful efforts to delay and stop action even with recent positive news around the Inflation Reduction Act.

The link between a robust democracy and climate progress is clear. We cannot expect effective and fair climate policies when the people most harmed by climate change, or burdened by toxic pollution, or whose sacred lands are the site of the next pipeline, are excluded from equal political representation. We cannot make progress on climate when people in favor of climate action have difficulty voting or are not engaged in the process (polling consistently shows that communities of color are more likely to support climate-forward policies).

Louisiana provides a clear example. In Louisiana’s new congressional mapBlack voters can only elect candidates of their choice in one out of six congressional districts, despite making up 31% of the voting age population. Do we really think it is a coincidence that a Tulane study showing that air quality along Louisiana’s Cancer Alley has been worsening as toxic air pollution has been rising? And that same analysis found that predominantly Black and low-income communities are acutely affected.

CEFG has identified democracy as a core pillar to achieving an effective and fair climate policy. We must strengthen and defend our democracy to effectively and fairly combat climate change and overcome the political power of the fossil fuel industry. It is hard to imagine an issue in philanthropy untouched by the assault on democracy. Antidemocratic forces seek to close the door to the will of the majority, elevate misinformation, and actively seek to exclude people of color from the voting booth. This assault threatens a bedrock value and our ability to make progress across a host of issues.

That brings me to action: What can funders do together to make progress on climate (and a multitude of shared issues)?

  1. Recognize the climate crisis and resolve to act. The climate crisis is existential, with impacts hitting the most vulnerable hardest (low income, older people, communities of color). The climate crisis and its solutions touch on so many sectors and issues, it’s hard to imagine who isn’t a climate funder. Talk to a climate funder to see how your current grantmaking can be shifted and framed to make that connection clear and more effective.
  2. Recognize the assault on democracy and resolve to act. Given that we will not make progress on climate without a healthy democracy, CEFG has revamped our “north star,” our guiding mission, vision, and principles to center racial equity, a healthy democracy, and a regenerative economy. We are seeking to align our programs, policies, and practices around those three principles.
  3. Learn together with new allies, funders, and organization. When CEFG first started trying to understand the field of democracy funders and activists, we needed to educate ourselves (and still do!), build new relationships, expand our network, and realign our thinking around how change happens. Now, having built the connections ourselves, we connect climate funders to organizations working on voting rights, civic engagement, judicial reform, and safe, fair elections so that climate funders may incorporate these strategies and organizations in their grantmaking.
  4. Move briskly from learning to action and develop links to funders and organizations working on voting rights, civic engagement, judicial reform, and safe, fair elections. And support those organizations.
  5. Don’t shy away from getting in the fray. The same forces that undermine science, sow doubt on climate, stoke divisions and anger, seek to erode rights for women, LGBTQ+, and immigrant communities, and stall progress on racial equity are those that push efforts to undermine democracy.

Paige Brown is program director at the Climate and Energy Funders Group, a program of the Biodiversity Funders Group.

Editor’s Note: CEP publishes a range of perspectives. The views expressed here are those of the authors, not necessarily those of CEP.

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