The Earthshot Prize, the world’s most prestigious environmental award, and Alana, a Brazilian philanthropic organisation dedicated to defending children’s rights and fostering their active participation in the world, today announced the expansion of their partnership to India, whereThe Earthshot Prize Awards Night and Summit will be hosted. The expansion includes the launch of a new programme to empower the country’s next wave of environmental changemakers. Through the I CAN Earthshot Challenge, delivered in collaboration with Design for Change, children aged 9–17 will turn ideas into action, demonstrating how young people can lead the fight to protect the planet and restore nature. The initiative represents the biggest youth outreach in The Earthshot Prize’s history.The I CAN Earthshot Challenge will reach close to one million students through a nationwide programme delivered online and across more than 15,000 schools in 24 states. The Challenge will encourage children to identify environmental challenges in their communities and develop practical solutions. Working in teams, participants will identify a local environmental challenge connected to one of The Earthshot Prize’s five Earthshots: Protect and Restore Nature, Revive Our Oceans, Clean Our Air, Fix Our Climate, and Build a Waste-Free World. Guided by Design for Change’s Feel, Imagine, Do and Share framework (FIDS), they will develop creative solutions, take action in their communities and share their impact with others.The finalists will travel to Mumbai this November to attend The Earthshot Prize Summit and Awards Night and participate in The Children’s Earthshot, a dedicated programme that brings together young changemakers from around the world. There, they will have the opportunity to connect with fellow young changemakers, environmental leaders, and innovators working to create positive change in their communities. The five winners, one for each Earthshot, will receive a US$2,000 grant to help bring their ideas to life in their communities.Commenting on the launch, Jason Knauf, CEO, The Earthshot Prize, said, “India’s young people have the creativity, ambition and determination to help solve some of the world’s most pressing environmental challenges. We are thrilled to launch the I CAN Earthshot Challenge and hope to inspire and support a new wave of leaders who can turn ideas into action for people and the planet.”Pedro Hartung, CEO, Alana, said, “For more than a decade, Alana has invested in initiatives that prove what happens when children are invited to participate not as beneficiaries, but as contributors and leaders. We have seen children improve schools, influence public debates and advance environmental solutions in their own communities. Supporting the I CAN Earthshot Challenge is a natural extension of that belief: that children are not only inheriting the future—they can help shape it today.”Kiran Bir Sethi, Founder, Design for Change, said, “Children have an incredible capacity to create change when they are given the opportunity to act. Through the I CAN Earthshot Challenge, young people across India will be encouraged to believe in their ability to make a difference and take meaningful action for a more sustainable future.”From 1st July, children across India will be able to access the I CAN Earthshot Challenge through the Design for Change website. The toolkit will introduce them to the five Earthshots and explore how each one connects to their own communities, guiding them through Design for Change’s Feel, Imagine, Do and Share (FIDS) framework to turn awareness into action. Design for Change will work with teachers across 15,000 schools in 24 states to support participation, while children from anywhere in India will also be able to submit their solutions online.The programme builds on the partnership between The Earthshot Prize and Alana, which began in 2025 in Brazil through Mini COP, a child- and youth-focused simulation of the UN climate negotiations that brought together children from across the country to learn about climate change, debate local solutions, develop proposals, and experience climate citizenship in a practical and engaging way. Selected participants also had the opportunity to engage with global leaders as part of The Earthshot Prize’s Impact Summit in Rio de Janeiro. Building on the success of this initiative, The Earthshot Prize and Alana are now expanding their partnership to India, working with Design for Change to empower thousands more children and young people to become environmental changemakers in their communities.India is home to more Earthshot Prize Winners and Finalists than any other country, with seven Finalists to date, including four Winners. These include Takachar, whose technology converts agricultural waste into valuable bio-products while reducing air pollution; Kheyti, whose Greenhouse-in-a-Box helps smallholder farmers build resilience to climate change; S4S Technologies, which tackles food waste through solar-powered food processing solutions. Together, these innovators reflect India’s depth of innovation and execution across clean energy, regenerative agriculture, waste management and air quality.India is also home to the world’s largest youth population, making young people central to this year’s Earthshot Prize engagement ahead of The Earthshot Prize Summit and Awards Night in November.The challenge was announced during The Earthshot Prize’s Impact Assembly co-hosted with Bloomberg Philanthropies, during London Climate Action Week. It forms part of The Earthshot Prize’s continued efforts to inspire and empower young people to help drive environmental solutions at scale.About The Earthshot PrizeFor more information about The Earthshot Prize, visit: www.earthshotprize.org.Follow The Earthshot Prize on Instagram, X, LinkedIn, Facebook, YouTube and TikTok.Founded by HRH Prince William and incubated in the The Royal Foundation in 2020 for a year before becoming an independent organisation, The Earthshot Prize is the world’s most prestigious and impactful award designed to identify, back and celebrate groundbreaking leadership in environmental action.The Earthshot Prize aims to turn the current pessimism surrounding environmental issues into optimism by championing inspiring leadership and helping to scale incredible cutting-edge solutions. It will discover 50 Winners over 10 years with the power to repair the planet. More than an award, The Earthshot Prize works in partnership with Founding Partners, Impact Partners and a Global Alliance to support the scaling of the solutions discovered and selected each year.Our Founding Partners are a group of leading global organisations and philanthropists, which act as strategic funding partners to The Earthshot Prize, including Aga Khan Development Network, AL Philanthropies, Allen Family Philanthropies, Bezos Earth Fund, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Breakthrough Energy Foundation, Builders Vision, Coleman Family Ventures, DP World, Elaine and Eduardo Saverin Foundation, Eleven Eleven Foundation, Giving Grousbeck Fazzalari, Holch Povlsen Foundation, Rob Walton Foundation, Sandy and Paul Edgerley, Standard Chartered Bank, Stelios Philanthropic Foundation, Temasek Trust, and Uber.Our Impact Partners are international organisations and philanthropists who support The Earthshot Prize globally and in the regions in which we host our annual Earthshot Prize Awards, including Berge Bulk and MAC Impact Philanthropies: https://earthshotprize.org/people-partners/our-partners/.Our Global Alliance represent some of the world’s most influential companies and organisations committed to the environment and sustainable development, who bring their expertise and global reach to support our Earthshots, accelerate our Finalists’ solutions and serve as nominating organisations. They are Arup, Bloomberg L.P., British Airways, bsi, C40 Cities, The Commonwealth Blue Charter, Conservation International, Construct ZERO, commonpurpose, Daughters for Earth, Deloitte, Earthday, Fauna & Flaura International, the green belt movement, Greenpeace, Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer, Hitachi, Hitachi, Ingka Group (IKEA), IMG, John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, Microsoft, The Multichoice Group, National Geographic, Natura &Co, Safaricom, Salesforce, Sustainable Markets Initiative, Countdown, UNEP, Unilever, Vodacom Group, Walmart, World Economic Forum, WWF and WRAP.About AlanaFor more than 30 years, Alana has championed children’s rights in Brazil and around the world. Through philanthropy, advocacy, research, and cross-sector partnerships, Alana works to influence systems, policies, and public debate so that children can grow up in healthy, safe, equitable, and sustainable environments. Its work spans education, health, digital environments, climate, nature, and social inclusion, always with the goal of placing children at the center of decisions that affect their lives and futures.About Design for ChangeDesign for Change (DFC) is the world’s largest movement of change by and for children. Founded in India in 2009 by educator and social entrepreneur Kiran Bir Sethi, DFC was created to nurture in every child the belief that they are not helpless, that change is possible, and that they can drive it. Inspired by Mahatma Gandhi’s call to “Be the Change,” DFC developed the simple Feel, Imagine, Do, Share (FIDS) framework that enables children to identify challenges around them, imagine solutions, take action, and share their stories to inspire others.Through FIDS, children are encouraged to:
The Earthshot Prize and Alana Expand Partnership to India With Design for Change to Empower Young Indian Environmental Changemakers
The Earthshot Prize and Alana Expand Partnership to India With Design for Change to Empower Young Indian Environmental Changemakers










