Published on 24 Oct 2022

EJN is offering reporting grants to support the production of in-depth stories that highlight previously untold threats to global biodiversity or explore new conservation-based solutions.

Please read the following sections carefully, as they contain important information on eligibility and the application process.

Overview

Earth’s wildlife populations have dropped by ~69% in just under 50 years, according to the latest Living Planet Report produced by the World Wildlife Fund and Zoological Society of London. As humans persist in clearing forests, trading in species of flora and fauna, consuming beyond the limits of the planet and polluting on an industrial scale, the biodiversity that sustains a liveable planet continues to disappear.

Earlier this year, INTERPOL, recognizing the impact of environmental crime on biodiversity, deemed poaching and trafficking an international security priority. It is also a grave health concern: the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services has warned that biodiversity loss increases the risk of future pandemics.

The media has an important part to play in raising awareness about the importance of biodiversity issues and enabling citizens, policymakers and private companies to determine how they can better address the drivers of biodiversity loss.

To support journalists around the world to produce engaging and fact-based stories for their home audiences, EJN is offering story grants through the Biodiversity Media Initiative, with financial support from Arcadia, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin. You can read published stories from the first two rounds of Biodiversity story grants here.


Story themes

For this particular grant opportunity, we are interested in funding ambitious stories that use innovative multimedia, collaborative or investigative approaches.

Special consideration will be given to applicants looking to conduct in-depth cross-border or enterprise reporting on biodiversity or conservation topics. Proposals for data journalism and geojournalism are welcome.

This year, themes we are interested in supporting include (but are not limited to):

  • Under-reported stories of trafficking of endangered flora and fauna and its impacts
  • New or little-known threats to species diversity
  • New methods to track environmental crimes such as illegal mining and logging and other drivers of biodiversity loss
  • Innovative, potentially scalable conservation solutions led by communities, governments or corporations
  • Efforts to boost “green” and “blue” economies to enable development that conserves rather than exploits the environment

As we are looking to raise global awareness about new threats or solutions, proposals that focus on topics or stories that have not been widely covered are preferred. Issues that have already received a lot of media coverage or don’t provide unique, high-impact angles are less likely to be selected.


Eligibility

For the purposes of this grant call, we are only accepting applications for stories focused on the countries listed here, though journalists from any country can apply.

Applications are open to journalists (online, print, television, radio) and other expert media practitioners with experience in investigative reporting and covering environmental issues.

We encourage applications from freelancers and staff from all types of media organizations—international, national, local and community-based.

We’ll accept both individual and group applications, but for the latter we ask that the application is made in the name of one lead applicant who will receive the grant on the group’s behalf, if awarded.

EJN reserves the right to disqualify applicants from consideration if they have been found to have engaged in unethical or improper professional conduct.

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