2026: New Grants Announced
As we start a new year, we are delighted to announce the outcome of our second 2025 funding round, which awarded £446,517 to nine partners to fund projects across the world, with an additional £90,000 dedicated to emergency humanitarian response.
Existing partnerships
Trustees approved follow-on funding for existing partners who demonstrated strong evidence of the impact of their work in partner communities:
AfriKids: We continue our support for AfriKids’ “Every Child in School 2026” project in Ghana, which aims to prioritise every child’s access to education and to improve literacy and numeracy proficiency. It supports parents and the wider communities in leading lasting changes, offering activities to expand livelihood support for parents and caregivers, enhance training in climate-smart agriculture in partnership and continue advocacy for teacher-retention policies.
Consortium for Street Children (CSC): We have extended our partnership with CSC for a further two years of activities, which continue to place street-connected children at the heart of systemic change. The project will expand on the successful Kolkata initiative, deepening the capacity of duty bearers to include children’s rights in urban agendas and working to support and protect street-connected children in the city.
Fields of Life (FoL): We continue our support of FoL’s I AM GIRL project in Uganda, which prioritises economic empowerment activities such as training teenage mothers in vocational skills. This project also focuses on increasing local knowledge, awareness and service uptake of adolescent sexual and reproductive health rights, including influencing policy and legal frameworks and raising awareness of these services in schools.
Smart Girls Uganda: The Unleash Her Greatness project in Uganda will elevate the provision of skills, mentorship and innovative opportunities that create economic independence for young women and girls from disadvantaged communities. This next phase seeks to increase the focus on job opportunities through the integration of entrepreneurial and financial literacy membership, provide start-up toolkits to empower graduates to establish their own businesses and enhance the production of Ecojua Smart Bags.
Smiling Through Light (STL): The next phase will scale up STL’s provision of clean, sustainable energy to off-grid and remote communities in Sierra Leone. Through this funding, STL will be able to focus on sustainability and expand its integration of digital solutions, engaging with off-grid sales training experts to advance their energy sales and reach more communities.
Wasteaid: Pulling on lessons learnt from the first phase, this project will address waste management issues in Diepsloot and Cosmo City in South Africa. Activities will include more practical equipment for the “wastepreneurs” to get their enterprises off the ground following their practical training, in addition to increasing community engagement for greater sustainability.
New partnerships
In addition to deepening our existing partnerships, we have started working with three new partners who demonstrate strategic alignment with the Foundation’s values and priorities:
STiR Education: Focuses on teacher motivation and establishing a space for teachers to network, collaborate, share strategies and experiences and support each other. This aims to improve the professional lives of teachers in Malaka and South-Central Timor, allowing them to feel happier and more confident in their positions and, consequently, inspiring children by creating a more sustainable learning environment.
Hello World: Works to bridge the digital divide by providing connectivity, education and power to hard-to-reach communities. This project focuses on partnering with schools and marginalised communities to deliver cost-effective, scalable and community-led solutions to internet access, establishing Hello Hubs—solar-powered, internet-connected digital learning spaces with touchscreens and educational software.
Sociedad Peruana de Derecho Ambiental (SPDA): This partnership will help SPDA strengthen and scale citizen-led conservation efforts, supporting communities, young leaders, private initiatives and grassroot collectives to transform conservation in Latin America. The project focuses on working with communities to improve nursery infrastructure, produce native and productive seedlings and test restoration models that integrate agroforestry and slope stabilisation. It also concentrates on climate-adaptation and developing participatory monitoring tools to inform regional policy and education.
Humanitarian Response
Under our Humanitarian Response pillar, we are proud to continue our partnership with the British Red Cross for its Gaza Crisis Appeal, UNRWA for the rehabilitation of schools in the West Bank and UK for UNHCR towards its support of Afghan refugees.




