
Foundation Funds Peatlands to Tree Planting Climate Wins
The Everpure Foundation is backing nature-based climate projects from Minnesota wetlands to Czech forests, proving corporate dollars can restore ecosystems while building community resilience. These investments are helping communities fight climate change by working with nature, not against it.
A corporate foundation is putting serious money behind an idea gaining global momentum: letting nature do the heavy lifting in the climate fight.
The Everpure Foundation is funding nature-based climate solutions across two continents, from protecting Minnesota's carbon-storing peatlands to replanting native trees across rural Czech Republic. Their approach focuses on projects that both reduce carbon emissions and strengthen local communities.
In the Czech Republic, nonprofit Sázíme Stromy is rewilding rural areas with help from corporate volunteers. The group plants native trees and fruit trees within communities, transforming landscapes while bringing people together around a shared mission.
Meanwhile, Minnesota's peatlands represent another powerful climate ally. These wetlands store massive amounts of carbon when left intact, making their protection a smart climate investment.
The foundation's strategy stands out because it treats climate action and community building as inseparable goals. Rather than choosing between environmental impact and human benefit, these projects deliver both.

Corporate volunteers aren't just writing checks. They're getting their hands dirty planting trees, connecting with local communities, and seeing firsthand how nature-based solutions work on the ground.
The Ripple Effect
This funding model shows how corporate resources can accelerate proven climate solutions that might otherwise struggle for support. When businesses invest in nature-based projects, they create jobs, restore ecosystems, and give communities tangible tools to build climate resilience.
The impact extends beyond carbon. Native tree planting improves air quality, prevents erosion, supports wildlife, and creates green spaces where people gather. Protected peatlands filter water, prevent flooding, and preserve unique ecosystems.
As more foundations recognize nature's power to store carbon naturally, funding is flowing toward projects that protect and restore rather than engineer new technologies. These solutions often cost less and benefit communities more directly than high-tech alternatives.
The Everpure Foundation's twin focus on Minnesota and the Czech Republic demonstrates these solutions work across different landscapes and cultures. Whether protecting existing carbon stores or planting new ones, the core principle remains: nature already knows how to heal itself when given support.
Communities participating in these projects gain more than environmental benefits—they're building skills, strengthening local networks, and creating models other regions can follow.
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Based on reporting by Google News - Climate Solution
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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