Bezos Earth Fund announces $2 billion pledge for landscape restoration and food-systems transformation, bringing overall commitment to nature to $3 billion

Funding will drive a three-fold nature agenda – conservation, restoration, and food-systems transformation
Press Release

A woman's hand places a seedling in the soil amongst many other leafy green seedlings.
Photo credit: AFR100 / World Resources Institute

Areas of focus for grants will include restoring landscapes in Africa and the U.S., increasing crop and livestock productivity without land expansion, reducing agricultural emissions, shifting diets, and reducing food loss and waste.

‍The Bezos Earth Fund today pledged $2 billion to help restore nature and transform food systems as part of its $10 billion commitment to fight climate change, improve nature, and advance environmental justice and economic opportunity. This commitment adds to a $1 billion pledge for nature announced at Climate Week NYC in September to help create, expand, manage, and monitor protected and conserved areas. Together, this $3 billion allocated to nature will drive a new, three-fold agenda focused on nature conservation, landscape restoration, and food-systems transformation.

‍"Our commitment today supports a three-fold imperative – we must conserve what we have, restore what we've lost, and grow what we need in harmony with nature. Investing in nature through both traditional and innovative approaches is essential to combat climate change, enhance biodiversity, protect the beauty of the natural world, and create a prosperous future."
Jeff Bezos

Landscape Restoration

One billion dollars in funding will support landscape restoration, with an initial focus on Africa and the U.S. Restoration efforts in Africa will include planting trees on degraded landscapes, revitalizing grasslands, and integrating trees into farmland. This work will help drive critical outcomes that include climate benefits, food security, job creation, economic growth, soil fertility, and improved connectivity between protected areas to protect biodiversity. The Bezos Earth Fund will partner with Africa-owned partners, including AFR100, to deliver these benefits at scale. In the U.S., funding will be dedicated to the restoration of more than 20 landscapes that sequester high levels of carbon, protect biodiversity, and deliver community benefits. Forty percent of the funds allocated to U.S. nature efforts will directly engage or benefit underserved communities.

Food Systems Transformation

The other $1 billion will help transform food and agricultural systems to support life without degrading the planet. The Bezos Earth Fund will allocate funds to support a range of urgent imperatives, including raising crop yields while shrinking the agricultural footprint, sharply reducing food loss and waste, shifting diets towards plant-based sources, and making agricultural supply chains more sustainable.

"To conserve our natural world is to conserve our human species," said Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE, ethologist, conservationist, and founder of the Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace. "We depend on nature for every breath we take and morsel we eat. We alone can determine its future – an awesome responsibility. This is a hugely welcome announcement and much needed as time is slipping away."

"Africa is home to the world's greatest restoration opportunity, with more than 700 million hectares of degraded land that can be restored," said Dr. Ibrahim Mayaki, Chief Executive Officer, African Union Development Agency-NEPAD. "Africa is the continent most dependent on the land for livelihoods and most vulnerable to climate change. Africa must therefore lead the way. We warmly welcome partnership with ambitious funders like the Bezos Earth Fund."

‍"This commitment recognizes the urgency of the situation before us," said Christiana Figueres, former U.N. climate chief and founding partner of Global Optimism. "For too long we have ignored the solutions that nature provides for us. Protection and restoration of our Earth is key to protecting and restoring our future. Key to our success will be reforming the way in which we produce and consume food, which is driving global warming, species loss, and inequality, rather than nourishing ourselves and our planet."‍

In line with the Bezos Earth Fund’s $10 billion commitment timeline, the funds announced today will be disbursed by 2030. In distributing grants, the Earth Fund will focus on regions and countries where needs and opportunities are greatest, and where commitments to conserving and restoring nature— while prioritizing local communities— are strongest.

Today’s announcement builds on the Bezos Earth Fund’s $1 billion commitment to conservation announced during Climate Week NYC in September. These funds will be used to create, expand, manage, and monitor protected and conserved areas in support of the 30x30 commitment – a goal to protect 30% of land and sea by 2030 to prevent mass extinctions and bolster resilience to climate change. The Earth Fund conservation grant distributions are focusing on the Congo Basin, the tropical Andes, and the tropical Pacific Ocean.

About the Bezos Earth Fund

The Bezos Earth Fund is transforming the fight against climate change with the largest ever philanthropic commitment to climate and nature protection. We’re investing $10 billion in this decisive decade to protect nature and drive systems-level change, creating a just transition to a low-carbon economy. By providing funding and expertise, we partner with organizations to accelerate innovation, break down barriers to success and create a more equitable and sustainable world. Join us in our mission to create a world where people prosper in harmony with nature.

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