Following a competitive call for story proposals, Internews’ Earth Journalism Network (EJN) recently selected six journalists to receive story grants for investigative environmental reporting. The grants are part of EJN’s Asia-Pacific project and will cover reporting projects in Bhutan, China, Indonesia, India and Vietnam.
Their investigations are wide-ranging, seeking to expose issues such as the environmental impacts of mega hydropower projects, the pollution and resultant health risks posed by reckless disposal of hazardous industrial waste, and how a lack of regulation and transparency combined with geopolitics are undermining efforts to tackle air pollution and its health consequences.
This is EJN Asia-Pacific’s second batch of investigative story grantees in 2020, and follows a round of grants awarded to another five journalists from India, Indonesia, Vietnam and the Cook Islands. Those grants were awarded at the beginning of this year and the reporters are currently working on their stories, despite travel restrictions during the Covid-19 pandemic.
As a result, some grantees have not been able to conduct field reporting as planned, and have been focusing on online research and phone interviews instead. EJN staff are working closely with them to provide the flexibility and support they need.
EJN Asia-Pacific’s investigative environmental story grantees:
Name of Grantee | Country of Residence |
1. Chencho Dema |
Bhutan |
2. Michael Standaert |
United States /China |
3. Mochammad Asad |
Indonesia |
4. Mukta Patil |
United States / India |
5. Neha Thirani Bagri |
India |
6. Viola Gaskell |
Hong Kong SAR China |
7. Adi Renaldi |
Indonesia |
8. Mustafa SIlalahi |
Indonesia |
9. Ishan Kukreti |
India |
10. Rachel Reeves |
Cook Islands |
11. Nguyen Thi Mai Lan |
Vietnam |
In addition to these grants for investigative stories, EJN also provided funding in March of this year specifically for coverage by South Pacific journalists, as part of our efforts to deepen support for environmental reporting in the vast region. Six journalists from Papua New Guinea, Fiji and the Solomon Islands received story grants to explore the importance of mangrove ecosystems for bay conservation, the impacts of logging on biodiversity, the problems with capturing undersized fish, the displacement of marine life due to sea level rise, challenges faced by climate migrants, and the illegal export of endangered and protected tree species.
Name of Grantee | Country of Residence |
1. Benjamin Kedoga |
Papua New Guinea |
2. Alfred Pagepitu Evapitu |
Solomon Islands |
3. Sheldon Chanel |
Fiji |
4. Luke Rawalai |
Fiji |
5. Stanley Ian Simpson |
Fiji |
6. Charles Noel Piringi (Charley Piringi) |
Solomon Islands |
We look forward to supporting these important stories and will continue to extend opportunities so reporters can cover the environment more effectively and with more depth.
(Banner photo: Aerial view of Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands. Credit: Dominique Bernard/UN/CC)