Environmental Education Grants in New Zealand: Funding Sustainability Learning

Environmental education — learning that builds understanding of, connection to, and stewardship of the natural world — is essential to New Zealand's environmental future. From Enviroschools in primary education to conservation volunteering programmes to community nature connections, a diverse ecosystem of funders supports environmental education and learning at all ages and stages.

Environmental education in Aotearoa

New Zealand's environmental education landscape draws on distinctive traditions:

Te Ao Māori (Māori worldview)

Mātauranga Māori — traditional Māori knowledge — includes rich understanding of ecological systems, seasonal patterns, biodiversity, and the relationships between human communities and natural environments. Kaitiakitanga (guardianship) is both a value and a practice. Environmental education that draws on Māori knowledge and values is increasingly recognised as offering distinctive insights.

Enviroschools movement

Enviroschools is New Zealand's most widespread school-based environmental education programme — a whole-school approach to sustainability that engages students, staff, and communities in making their school and community more sustainable. Approximately 1,000 schools (about 40%) participate.

Outdoor education

New Zealand's outdoors provides extraordinary opportunities for environmental learning — from urban parks to wilderness. Outdoor education — tramping, camping, marine education, conservation volunteering — builds both environmental understanding and lifelong wellbeing.

Conservation volunteering

DoC and community conservation groups provide opportunities for practical conservation work — planting, pest control, monitoring — that deepens environmental understanding through action.

Key funders for environmental education

Enviroschools Foundation

The Enviroschools Foundation supports the national Enviroschools programme — with funding from central government (Ministry for the Environment, Ministry of Education) and regional councils. Schools participate through their regional Enviroschools provider.

Department of Conservation (DoC)

DoC funds:
- Conservation education in schools (Kiwi Guardians, School Programmes)
- Community conservation education
- Ranger and educator programmes

Ministry for the Environment

MfE funds some environmental education initiatives — particularly those advancing waste reduction, climate understanding, and biodiversity.

Ministry of Education

The Ministry funds:
- Enviroschools as part of sustainability curriculum
- EOTC (Education Outside the Classroom) subsidies
- Some school sustainability projects

Regional councils

Regional councils are major funders of environmental education:
- School outreach programmes (water quality, biosecurity, native biodiversity)
- Community education on regional environmental issues (freshwater, pest management)
- Environmental education grants for community groups and schools

Community foundations

Community foundations fund environmental education as part of community wellbeing:
- Nature connection programmes for urban communities
- School garden and food growing projects
- Community conservation education

Gaming trusts

Some gaming trusts fund environmental education:
- Equipment for outdoor education
- School conservation projects
- Community environmental programmes

Forest & Bird

Forest & Bird has educational programmes and some grant activity for conservation education.

The Morgan Foundation

The Morgan Foundation funds environmental education and conservation — particularly projects supporting rangatahi/youth environmental leadership.

Types of funded environmental education

School programmes

  • Enviroschools whole-school sustainability
  • Conservation education visits (DoC, regional council, community conservation)
  • School gardens and growing projects
  • Environmental monitoring programmes (water testing, bird counts)
  • Kaitiakitanga and Māori environmental knowledge

Outdoor and experiential education

  • School outdoor education (tramping, camping, marine education)
  • Nature play for young children
  • Urban nature connection programmes
  • Conservation volunteering for youth

Community environmental education

  • Adult learning about local ecosystems
  • Community pest control training and coordination
  • Freshwater monitoring by community groups
  • Community sustainability education

Youth environmental leadership

  • Rangatahi conservation leadership programmes
  • Youth climate action support
  • Environmental youth voice and advocacy

Cultural environmental education

  • Mātauranga Māori environmental knowledge programmes
  • Marae-based environmental learning
  • Pacific environmental knowledge and stewardship

Making the case for environmental education grants

Strong environmental education grant applications:

  • Learning outcomes: what environmental knowledge, values, or behaviours will participants develop? Be specific.
  • Action orientation: the best environmental education leads to action — stewardship, conservation behaviour, sustainability practices. Show how your programme goes beyond awareness to action.
  • Connection to place: environmental education is most powerful when connected to specific places — local rivers, native forest, coastal habitats. Demonstrate place-based learning.
  • Equity: environmental education is disproportionately accessed by affluent communities. Applications serving low-income communities, rural areas, or communities without ready nature access make a strong equity case.
  • Sustainability: environmental education programmes should model what they teach — sustainable materials, carbon consciousness, ecological awareness in programme design.

Tahua's grants management platform supports environmental funders investing in environmental education — with school and community programme tracking, environmental outcome measurement, multi-funder coordination, and the tools that help conservation and environmental funders build coherent education investment portfolios.

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