| St Andrews Prize for the Environment | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | Significant contributions to environmental concerns and issues |
| Sponsored by | University of St Andrews ConocoPhillips (until 2020) |
| Country | Scotland, United Kingdom |
| Presented by | University of St Andrews |
| Reward(s) | US$100,000 and Medal |
| First awarded | 1998[1] |
| Website | www |
The St Andrews Prize for the Environment is a prestigious[2][3] international environmental award funded and administered by the University of St Andrews in Scotland, United Kingdom.[4] Prior to 2020, the American exploration and production company ConocoPhillips sponsored the prize.[5]
The award recognises significant contributions to environmental issues and concerns aligned to the Sustainable Development Goals. Applications are invited from individuals, multi-disciplinary teams or community groups. The winning environmental project receives funding of US$100,000 and each of the two runners-up receive US$25,000.[6]
The current Chair of the eight-person judging panel is CEO of the Royal Academy of Engineering, Hayaatun Sillem.[7]
List of Winners
List of winners has been taken from the St Andrews Prize website:[8]
2019—Present
| Year | Region Served | Winner | Initiative | URL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Misión Tiburón | Community-based project to protect and restore blue carbon sinks in the Hammerhead Shark Sanctuary. | ||
| 2021 | Snowchange Cooperative | A landscape rewilding programme which incorporates indigenous knowledge to tackle ecosystems affected by climate change, especially peatlands, in the Arctic and boreal areas of Finland. | ||
| 2020 | Conservation Through Public Health | A project which takes a multi-faceted approach to conservation integrating approaches addressing biodiversity conservation, health advances and livelihood improvements for local communities. | ||
| 2019 | Saathi | Using agricultural waste to create a biodegradable menstruation product for women in parts of rural India. | ||
2009—2018
| Year | Region Served | Winner | Initiative | URL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | The Mountain Institute | Restoration of an ancestral water system to tackle water scarcity issues in the Nor-Yauyos Cochas Landscape Reserve of Peru. | ||
| 2017 | Plantwise | Improving information dissemination to reduce reliance on harmful pesticides, increase crop yields and to improve food security. | ||
| 2016 | Liter of Light | An innovative source of light which involves refracting light from a solution in a plastic bottle to brighten homes and produce no carbon emissions. | ||
| 2015 | Wild Chimpanzee Foundation | A multi-level conservation project, which aims to protect the largest remaining population of wild Chimpanzees on the Foutah Djallon-Bafing River (FDBR) region in Guinea, West Africa. | ||
| 2014 | Blue Ventures | Empowering local communities in southwest Madagascar to protect their marine environment and manage their resources sustainably by integrating holistic community-based health services within local biodiversity conservation initiatives. | ||
| 2013 | Elephants and Bees | Project developed from the behavioural discovery that honey bees can be used as a natural deterrent to crop raiding elephants. | ||
| 2012 | Lion Guardians | Thirty-two non-literate Maasai warriors in Kenya were trained and employed as community conservationists and field biologists. | ||
| 2011 | Biolite | An innovative cookstove, which provides improved air quality and a clean economic source of electricity inside the home. | ||
| 2010 | Bhaskar Sen Gupta | An innovative method of removing arsenic from groundwater without using chemicals. | — | |
| 2009 | One Earth Designs | For the development of a high-performance solar cooker (SolSource) to meet the needs of Himalayan villagers. The SolSource 3-in-1 project aims to supply clean energy for cooking, heating, and thermo-electricity generation to high-altitude low-income communities. | ||
1999—2008
| Year | Region Served | Winner | Initiative | URL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | Ian Thorpe | The Elephant Toilet provides an innovative and sustainable sanitation solution which could benefit millions of people across Africa, and beyond. | ||
| 2007 | David Manalo | River, Fibre and Power Project providing sustainable lighting services in remote locations in the Philippines. | — | |
| 2006 | Erika Vohman | Promoting the use of Maya nut in Central America. | ||
| 2005 | Pump Aid | Creation of the Elephant Pump, a pump built using simple technology and locally available materials. | ||
| 2004 | Conrad Feather | Deployment of GPS and other similar technologies to enable the Nahua people of Peru to map and better understand the land they live on. | — | |
| 2003 | Bunker Roy | Founding of the Barefoot College in Rajasthan to train semi-literate and non-literate women to spread solar energy in remote Himalayan villages. | ||
| 2002 | Monina Escalada | In collaboration with the International Rice Research institute of the Philippines, rice farmers in Northern Vietnam were persuaded to limit usage of insecticides. | — | |
| 2001 | George Odera Outa | A team from the University of Nairobi led by Outa developed a community education project to combat the environmental hazards that affect Lake Victoria. | — | |
| 2000 | Hikmat Hilal and Amer El-Hamouz | A team from An-Najah National University in the West Bank put forward a proposal to turn the waste from olive oil production into useful by-products. | — | |
| 1999 | Daniel Limpitlaw | Limpitlaw's work on further understanding the links between early mining developments and subsequent environmental degradation. | — | |
See also
References
- ↑ "Man wins prize for 'elephant loo'". BBC News. 13 May 2008.
- ↑ Matheson, Rob (24 June 2013). "Cooking up innovation". MIT News.
- ↑ Pearce, Fred (24 September 2009). "ConocoPhillips' opposition to US climate bill is devious and dishonest". The Guardian.
- ↑ "About the St Andrews Prize". University of St Andrews.
- ↑ "The St Andrews Prize for the Environment". st-andrews.ac.uk.
- ↑ "About - The St Andrews Prize for the Environment". www.thestandrewsprize.com. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
- ↑ Bush, Janet; Chui, Michael. "Forward Thinking on the enduring power of engineering in a digitizing world with Hayaatun Sillem". mckinsey.com. McKinsey Global Institute. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
- ↑ "Previous Winners". University of St Andrews. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
