The climate crisis is humankind’s greatest challenge. We call for a new Nobel Prize to honor those leading the way forward — and we begin by endowing the first award with €1,000,000.
Join our MissionCompleting The Nobel Legacy
When Alfred Nobel established the Nobel Prizes in 1895, his vision was to reward those whose work gave ’the greatest benefit to humankind.’ For more than a century, these awards have rightly honored groundbreaking achievements. Now is the time to continue this legacy with a prize for the defining challenge of the 21st century.
The first Nobel Prizes are awarded in Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Literature and Peace, launching more than a century of honoring humanity’s greatest achievements.
The Nobel Prize in Economics was added. It has since been awarded with the support of Sweden’s central bank, demonstrating that Nobel tradition can evolve to address new global challenges.
Give climate a seat at the table
Humanity faces its greatest challenge — the climate crisis. Solutions in this field benefit all people, across generations and borders. The Nobel stage is where humanity’s greatest achievements are celebrated, yet one seat is empty for the defining challenge of our time.
Our commitment
1 million euros (approx. 11 million Swedish kronor) have already been deposited in an account managed by a notary and is ready to be released if the Nobel Committee agrees to establish this prize in 2026.
Key Principles
Ecosia provides the seed endowment for the first Climate Nobel Prize, but over time it should ideally be sustained by a broad societal coalition.
The prize is established in close collaboration with the Nobel Foundation and awarded by an independent jury consisting of scientific, societal and economic institutions.
The prize is administered under the auspices of the Nobel Foundation, following the model of the Prize in Economic Sciences to ensure consistency with Alfred Nobel’s legacy.
Trees planted by Ecosia
dedicated to climate action
The climate crisis is the defining challenge for humanity. Scientific breakthroughs already exist, but the real bottleneck is turning these solutions into action at the scale and speed required.
A Nobel Prize in Climate and Planetary Health would not just celebrate achievements — it would help accelerate the transition itself. By giving climate leaders and innovators the same recognition as Nobel laureates before them, the prize can inspire even greater efforts, create urgency, and build momentum for solutions that benefit our planet and all of humanity.
The existing Nobel Prizes in Physics, Chemistry, and Medicine were created to honor groundbreaking scientific discoveries. These awards rightly celebrate inventions, theories, and breakthroughs that advance human knowledge. But when it comes to the climate crisis, the challenge is no longer the absence of scientific insight — it is the implementation of proven solutions at the scale and speed required.
A prize dedicated to climate and planetary health would acknowledge this essential shift: from invention to impact. We believe that the defining challenge of our time deserves its own dedicated category — just as the Prize in Economic Sciences was added in 1969 to reflect its growing societal importance.
The Prize may be awarded to individuals, organizations, movements, or communities. It aims to honor the true locus of change — whether this is an individual catalyst or a collective achievement.
Our invitation to the Nobel Foundation is one of partnership and alignment: together, we can ensure the prizes continue to reflect the challenges and opportunities of our time. We propose three initial categories of recognition and remain open to refining these in close dialogue with the Nobel Foundation and relevant institutions:
We propose that, similar to the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, the Climate Nobel Prize be administered by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Laureates would be announced alongside other Nobel Prize winners and honored at the official Nobel Prize ceremony.
Our ambition is for the first Climate Nobel Prize to be awarded in December 2026.
Ecosia pledges the first €1 million to fund the inaugural prize. This fund has already been deposited in an account managed by a notary and is ready to be released if the Nobel Committee agrees to establish the prize in 2026.
Ecosia is open to extending its support over time and welcomes the opportunity to share this responsibility with others who support the creation of a Climate Nobel Prize. Over time, the prize could be sustained by a broad coalition of purpose-driven institutions, ensuring long-term and independent financing.
The endowment of €1 million (approximately 11 million Swedish kronor) reflects the standard prize amount awarded to Nobel laureates in other categories. By matching this amount, we signal that achievements in climate action are no less significant than those in Physics, Literature, or Medicine.
Your voice matters. You can:
Every voice and every share helps build the case for a Nobel Prize that reflects the urgency of our time.
A few months ago, we started to informally reach out to the Nobel Foundation and formally handed over our offer to fund the prize in December 2025. This marks the beginning of a collaborative process under the Foundation’s auspices to define governance and evaluation structures, in a spirit of partnership and alignment — ensuring that the Nobel Prizes continue to reflect the challenges and opportunities of our time.
Ecosia is the world’s largest tree-planting movement and Europe’s largest search engine. We dedicate 100% of our profits to climate action.
Leading this initiative is a natural extension of Ecosia’s mission: to drive large-scale systemic change for the planet. We believe that if the Nobel Prize, the world’s most prestigious award, were to honor climate leaders and innovators, it could help catalyze the ambition and action needed to accelerate climate solutions.