The integration of climate strategy with community care is no longer optional—it is the foundation of resilience. For nonprofits and corporate partners, aligning capital with these pillars ensures that every dollar invested contributes to a sustainable, equitable future for the communities we serve.
When Climate and Community Belong in Your Funding Plan
Climate Risk Integration
How our programs strategically account for landscape changes and participant vulnerability.
Nonprofits: Climate Change Is Already Shaping Our Work
For many nonprofits, the communities we serve are precisely those most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Whether it’s food security, housing, or health, environmental shifts are already rewriting the rules of social impact.
Integrating green economy considerations into our programs isn’t just about the environment; it’s about mission resilience. As the funding landscape shifts, integrating climate logic into our proposals is becoming a prerequisite for long-term partnership.
Operational Stewardship
Demonstrable efforts to stabilize and reduce the emissions produced by our internal operations.
The ability of our organization to grow whilst helping communities face climate-driven disruptions.
Resilience Capacity
Corporates: Climate Risk, Reputation, and Real Community Impact
For corporations, climate responsibility is increasingly tied to the 'Social' in ESG. Climate risk isn’t just about emissions; it’s about the stability and resilience of the communities where we operate and the customers we serve.
Investors and boards are moving beyond surface-level reporting. They want to see that our community capital is working to address the real-world vulnerabilities that climate change accelerates, ensuring our social license to operate remains secure in a changing world.
• Integration of climate adaptation into social impact portfolios.
• Transparent alignment between business sustainability and community resilience.
• Proactive management of reputational risks through measurable environmental results.
In Canada, True Climate Strategy Includes Indigenous Partnership
A serious climate and community strategy in Canada must respond to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) Calls to Action. For both nonprofits and corporates, partnering with and consulting Indigenous communities is a core responsibility that should be integrated into our programs and proposals.
Meaningful progress requires moving toward collaboration that respects Indigenous rights and leadership. By including Indigenous voices as a central pillar of our capital planning, we build strategies that are truly inclusive, ethical, and effective.
Co-creation
Traditional Knowledge
Early Engagement
Bringing Climate, Community, and Capital Together
We help organizations integrate climate responsibility, community impact, and capital planning into cohesive funding strategies. By moving beyond silos, we build roadmaps that are resilient and ready for a changing economy. Our role is to translate complex climate goals into clear funding narratives that resonate with modern funders, ensuring your capital strategy reflects your values while meeting rigorous reporting expectations.
Find funding
We help you apply for grants and loans that support your climate and community goals.
Learn together
We help you learn about Traditional Indigenous knowledge and connect it to your projects.
Plan sustainably
We help you build simple plans so your funding and impact can last.
Let’s Build Your Funding Plan Together
Whether you are a nonprofit seeking to integrate climate resilience or a corporate partner aligning capital with community impact, we are here to help.
Let’s create a strategy that balances purpose and capital planning for long-term success.