We are pleased to announce that Home Planet Fund has joined 1% for the Planet, and was featured as their community conservation partner for October 2024! This partnership is intended to advance our impact as well as involve more businesses in the environmental movement.

1% for the Planet is an accountability partner for businesses that are ready to reject business as usual and give back to environmental partners making a difference around the globe. Started in 2002 by Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia, and Craig Mathews, founder of Blue Ribbon Flies, their members have given hundreds of millions of dollars to environmental partners to date.

Home Planet Fund was selected as a featured partner because we are aligned with 1% for the Planet’s Impact Targets.

“People in frontline communities are busy doing the work: from women’s collectives in the Pacific Islands, to farmers in the glacial watersheds of Tajikistan and Afghanistan, to pastoralists in East Africa’s grasslands, to tribes in Southeast Alaska stewarding the Tongass rainforest. This work has an outsized impact on the global polycrisis of climate, biodiversity, and migration and supports these local communities in their ways of life. We are entirely focused on supporting this critically important work, and are very excited to be part of the 1% for the Planet community and partner with businesses who are dedicated to mission, above all else.”

-Dilafruz Khonikboyeva, Executive Director, Home Planet Fund

We are all in for earth.

Women gardening.
Women-led gardening project in Lilisiana Village. Food grown helps feed villagers, as well as to augment women’s income. Photo Credit: Jason Gagame
Shaelene Moler, one of Home Planet Fund’s partners in Southeast Alaska, shows one of the Tlingit Potato Gardens. These are part of a Native-led food sovereignty movement across the region. Photo Credit: Julie Ellison
Ashaninka Indigenous peoples and their allies walking to a village in the Amazon.
Ashaninka Indigenous peoples and their allies established a surveillance outpost by an illegal road to guard against further attempts by outsiders to extract the region's natural wealth. By Andre Dib.
Maasai woman walking with two donkeys loaded with firewood in the Crater Highlands region, along the East African rift in Tanzania.
Maasai woman walking with two donkeys loaded with firewood in the Crater Highlands region, along the East African rift in Tanzania.