The remaining $15 million will support local environmental and community organizations in the United States and Canada.
The Coca-Cola Foundation will identify community initiatives that meet the requirements of the Foundation’s new Stop the Spread fund.
“We know the Covid-19 crisis is far from over,” said Bea Perez, president and chair, The Coca-Cola Foundation. “Last year, during the initial outbreak phase, we channeled over $56 million of relief funds to organizations positioned to mobilize quickly and provide aid and supplies to healthcare workers and populations. Now, as Covid-19 continues to impact communities around the world, this new fund will allow the Foundation to focus on supporting charities working to stop the spread of the virus.”
More than $6.6 million in grants have been awarded from the $20 million fund to stop the spread of Covid-19.
The grants include $2 million for Project Last Mile to support vaccine rollouts in eight African countries: Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Ghana, Eswatini, Mozambique, South Africa and Tanzania.
The grants also include $3.6 million for United Way of Mumbai to fund vaccine distribution initiatives and public awareness campaigns in 22 districts in India.
They also include $500,000 for COVAX, a program co-led by the World Health Organization to ensure equitable, global access to Covid-19 vaccines. The contribution was made in support of Global Citizen’s VAX LIVE: Concert to Reunite the World (airing and streaming on May 8), which calls for new commitments from governments, the private sector and philanthropists to equitably distribute Covid-19 vaccines, tests and treatments to the world’s poorest countries.
Grants for environmental and community organizations:
In the company’s hometown of Atlanta, as well as other communities across the United States and Canada, the Foundation awarded several grants totaling $15 million to local, environmental and community initiatives.
The initiatives include Atlanta BeltLine Partnership to support green infrastructure planned for Westside Park and Enota Park.
They also include Trust for Public Land to support its showcase site on the Chattahoochee as part of the initial phase of the Chattahoochee RiverLands, a 100-mile trail from Buford Dam to Chattahoochee Bend State Park.
The grants also went to Robert W. Woodruff Arts Center Inc. to support the annual corporate campaign. The Woodruff Arts Center serves more than 850,000 patrons annually, including hundreds of thousands of students from throughout the state of Georgia.
The grants also backed the National Park Foundation to support waste reduction, recycling, resilience and sustainability projects.
They also buttressed Ducks Unlimited Canada to support efforts to protect and restore critical watersheds across Canada.
The grants also backed Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Canada and Puerto Rico to support academic success with a focus on afterschool homework programs.
The grants also propped up the United Services Organization (USO) to support initiatives to connect service members and their families.
The grants also backed the United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta to support the Child Well-Being Impact Fund.
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