Sign outside San Diego Gas & Electric building
A sign outside a San Diego Gas & Electric building. Courtesy of the company

San Diego Gas & Electric will award close to $1 million in grants to 30 recipients of the 2024 Environmental Champions Award Grants, continuing the company’s long-standing commitment to supporting local environmental initiatives through habitat restoration and urban greening projects.

Since its inception in 2011, the program has provided critical funding to numerous nonprofit organizations, with over $10 million invested in community-based environmental efforts in the past seven years alone.

“SDG&E is committed to driving positive environmental change through strategic collaborations with local organizations,” said Estela de Llanos, SDG&E vice president, land and environmental services chief sustainability officer. “By increasing our grant amounts this year, we hope to amplify the impact of these initiatives, fostering healthier and more sustainable communities.”

For 2024, SDG&E has increased the range of grant awards to between $20,000 and $40,000, up from previous years. This enhancement aims to provide more substantial support to initiatives that can help improve the local environment in San Diego County and southern Orange County.

More than 85% of this year’s Environmental Champions grants benefit diverse and underserved populations. Program delivery ranges from Palomar Mountain to Tijuana River Valley to Borrego Springs, to help share the benefits of environmental progress equitably across the region. 

One Environmental Champions grant awardee is San Diego Children and Nature. It intends to use its $35,000 SDG&E grant to install one community garden and three schoolyard pollinator gardens, integrating local wildflowers, shrubs, and trees.

“These funds will contribute to urban greening in Imperial Beach, Chula Vista, and Lemon Grove, increasing biodiversity and serving as inspiration for other schools and communities to follow suit,” said SDCaN Executive Director Tara Faud. “Additionally, these gardens can engage the community in dialogue about the many benefits of ‘greening’ the places we live, work and play.”

SDG&E provides additional support to grantees and other organizations through volunteerism and personal donations. SDG&E employees gave more than $800,000 in personal donations through payroll deductions to nonprofit organizations last year alone. SDG&E also hosts several volunteer programs including Environmental All Stars and SDGivE which pair employee volunteer projects with smaller charitable grants.

The 30 environmental champions include:

Agua Hedionda Lagoon Foundation, in partnership with WildcoastAnza Borrego Desert Natural History AssociationBayside Community Center
Botanical Community Development InitiativesCalifornia State Parks FoundationCirculate San Diego
Coastal Roots FarmDowntown San Diego Public Spaces FoundationEarth Discovery Institute
Fallbrook Land ConservancyForever Balboa ParkGarden 31 Community Initiatives
Global Action Research Center, in partnership with Berry Good Food FoundationHealthy Day PartnersIndigenous Regeneration
Leah’s Pantry, fiscal agent for Barrio BotanyMission Trails Regional Park FoundationNature Collective
Olivewood Gardens & Learning CenterParadise GardenersProject New Village, in partnership with Treedom
San Diego CanyonlandsSan Diego Children and Nature CollaborativeSan Diego Parks Foundation
San Diego River Park Foundation, in partnership with YMCAServicing Every SoulTree San Diego
UC San Diego Foundation, Scripps Oceanography/Birch AquariumUrban Corps of San Diego, in partnership with CA State ParksVolcan Mountain Foundation

For more information about the Environmental Champions grant program and to see a full list of this year’s award recipients and their featured projects, please visit www.sdge.com/community.