Climate action looks very different today than it did just a year ago. A new administration in the White House has reshaped the landscape, and climate donors face both setbacks and opportunities.
We at Giving Green have spent the past year mapping out how smart donations can maintain (and accelerate) momentum under these new circumstances, both in the U.S. and globally. Our year-end climate giving guide, published in November, distills this work.
In this post, we will cover:
- Giving Green’s research approaches
- 2025-2026 research priorities and findings: prioritized philanthropic strategies and Top Climate Nonprofits
- Regranting fund updates: $26 million to 29 grantees
- Plans for 2026 and beyond
- Other organizational updates: impact and mistakes
- Working together
Giving Green’s research approaches
We encourage impact-maximizing donors to focus on systems change
Giving Green’s goal is to maximize donors' impact per dollar by identifying fundable climate solutions that decrease warming. Our research has led us to believe that this will come through a focus on systems change: efforts such as policy advocacy, technology innovation, and market-shaping mechanisms that change the rules of the game.
Traditional impact evaluation methods tend to favor short-term outcomes, quantitative data, and linear theories of change, as noted by the Shifting Systems Initiative, a multi-year effort led by major philanthropies.
In climate, this might look like prioritizing projects that can point to a concrete number of trees planted over policy-advocacy efforts that reduce the incentives for deforestation at the national or global scale.
When Giving Green launched in 2019, we evaluated carbon offsets, a natural fit if you value certainty and clear metrics such as dollars per ton of CO₂ reduced. As we dug deeper, however, we found many offset projects overpromised and underdelivered. And even considering the terrific performance of cookstoves like BURN, backed by randomized controlled trials, we wondered: could we reduce climate change at scale with a blanket of cookstove projects?
So we shifted strategy. Today, we recommend climate donors focus on systems change—by supporting philanthropic initiatives that shift incentives and actions far beyond the immediate project—to maximize their impact.
Quantitative analysis is one input—not the final word
Our systems-change lens recognizes that some of the most impactful climate interventions—those pulling the policy, technology, and market levers—are inherently difficult to measure using standard cost-effectiveness analyses (CEAs).
While CEAs can be a valuable tool, we view them as one part of a broader evaluative process rather than a definitive measure of impact.
In practice, we use quantitative modeling to pressure-test our assumptions and assess the plausibility of impact, particularly in high-uncertainty areas.
We recognize that this is a departure from the norms in more near-termist effective altruist contexts, where cost-effectiveness estimates are more readily used and accepted, and we are learning how to better communicate our research with clarity and nuance.
2025-2026 research priorities and findings
Some high-impact climate solutions remain neglected
While mainstream awareness of climate change is high, less than 2% of global philanthropy goes to climate change mitigation, and many areas within climate remain badly underfunded relative to their expected impact.
For instance, aviation currently contributes to around 2.5% of global CO₂ emissions, but under business-as-usual conditions could exceed 20% by 2050. Non-CO₂ effects, such as those from contrails, result in at least as much warming as CO2 emissions. Yet philanthropic funding to mitigate aviation’s non-CO₂ emissions is tiny, at less than USD $15 million per year, according to our estimates[1].
In our report on how effective climate donations can decarbonize aviation, we found that actions such as rerouting around 5%-10% of flights could cut 80% of contrail emissions, at a cost around USD $1.75/tCO₂e[2].
Using the criteria of Scale, Feasibility, and Room for More Funding, and following our five-step research process, we have identified the following giving strategies as high-leverage (in no particular order):
- Unleashing Clean Energy in the U.S.
- Reducing Aviation Emissions
- Reducing Maritime Shipping Emissions
- Decarbonizing Heavy Industry
- Reducing Food Systems Emissions
- Advancing the Energy Transition in Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs)
- Scaling Demand for Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR)
- Advancing Solar Radiation Management (SRM) Governance
To see the reasoning by which we chose these strategies and not others we considered, take a look at our research dashboard. For each of these high-level strategies, the linked reports detail the specific giving opportunities that we think offer the most cost-effective impact.
2025-2026 Top Climate Nonprofits
The next step in our five-step research process is to identify high-impact nonprofits that execute these strategies.
Here are Giving Green’s 2025-2026 Top Climate Nonprofits:
Regranting fund updates: $26 million to 29 grantees
For the Q4 2025 disbursement of the Giving Green Fund, our regranting fund, we recommended USD $26 million to 29 climate nonprofits working on high-impact strategies—our largest grant cycle to date.
Explore our past grant disbursements by year, by sector, and by grant type here.
Plans for 2026 and beyond
Setting research priorities to inform 2026 Top Climate Nonprofits recommendations and Giving Green Fund grants
Heading into 2026, here are some of our tentative research interests. We will finetune them in Q1 and publish a final list of 2026 research priorities in Q2.
- Make around USD $30 million in new grants from the Giving Green Fund.
- Start new research into:
- Impactful interventions that mitigate global warming while improving livelihoods.
- Catastrophic climate risks and overshoot.
- Update existing research and make new grants in the following areas:
- Advancing the Energy Transition in Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs). We are in the process of hiring a dedicated researcher for this workstream.
- Decarbonizing heavy industry
- Reducing food systems emissions
- Explore the following topics:
- How climate donations can ensure that the build-out of AI infrastructure does not accelerate global warming.
- Giving opportunities related to U.S. innovation and global technology diffusion.
Launching recommendations of Top Biodiversity Nonprofits
Entrusted by a donor, we embarked on a consulting project in 2025 to identify high-impact philanthropic strategies to protect biodiversity and the ecosystem services it supports. This work is designed to move beyond fragmented efforts and target the systemic drivers of biodiversity loss.
We have narrowed our research to two promising areas:
- Preventing land use change. Land use change is the leading global driver of biodiversity loss on land. Additionally, land use change is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions, meaning that tackling this problem will fight climate change, too. We are exploring strategies that work towards a more sustainable food system and protect critical habitats.
- Reducing the ecosystem damage of fishing. Particularly in marine ecosystems, the overexploitation of species—especially via unsustainable or destructive fishing practices—is a dominant threat. We are exploring how advocating for better policies and innovations can stop overexploitation of the marine environment while benefiting fishing communities.
We expect to recommend a list of Top Biodiversity Nonprofits in early 2026.
Offering better products as an independent organization
In late 2025, Giving Green left our fiscal sponsor, IDinsight, and officially became an independent nonprofit. We now host the Giving Green Fund ourselves. We also took the opportunity to refresh our brand identities and revamp our website.
With these growth milestones, we hope to offer more dynamic grantmaking through the Giving Green Fund, more responsive advisory services to our partners and donors, and stronger, clearer offerings for the public on our website.
Other organizational updates
Impact at a glance: Giving Green is a 20X impact multiplier
Since 2019, donors who use Giving Green’s research have given over $56 million to effective climate solutions. It means for every dollar donated to Giving Green’s operations, we drive an additional $20 to high-impact climate nonprofits.
You can read more about our impact in our annual impact reports.
We are grateful to donors who have supported our operations, which allow us to hire more researchers to increase the depth and breadth of research, as well as more communications and development professionals to spread effective climate-giving guidance more widely.
We are currently hiring for an operations generalist role. In the new year, we will add a growth position, for which we will consider candidates with communications and/or development experiences.
Mistakes
In line with our values of truth-seeking, humility, transparency, and collaboration, we keep our mistakes page updated.
Working together
Collaborating with audience-specific fundraising organizations
As a charity evaluator, we rely on effective-giving partners who work in specific countries and with particular audiences to spread our climate-giving guidance. Thanks to thoughtful coordination within the effective giving ecosystem, we have had the privilege of collaborating on donor advisory, consulting projects, and events with partners such as Doneer Effectief, Effektiv Spenden, Mieux Donner, Ellis Impact, High Impact Athletes, Effectief Geven, and many more.
If you are an effective giving organization and would like to chat about how to engage donors interested in climate, please reach out.
Collaborating with other cause areas
While Giving Green is primarily focused on climate mitigation, we also recognize that donors came to Giving Green with their unique values and motivations. We are here to support them to explore the intersections that touch on climate, such as animal welfare and global health and development, and we are keen to collaborate with the many partners in the space.
We welcome feedback at hello@givinggreen.earth.
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Our previous estimate, published in November 2025, showed less than USD $5 million per year going towards contrail mitigation. It was based on aggregating data from nine of the largest funders in aviation. Since then, we have learned of another major funding source of around $10 million per year, so we have revised our estimate.
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Our previous estimate, published in November 2025, quoted a different figure (<$1/tCO2e) from contrails.org. Since then, contrails.org has released more detailed information specifying that the <$1/tCO2e figure is the lower bound estimate and $1.75/tCO2e is their central estimate.
