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Sustainability in Action Awards

Fred Briones accepts the Zero Waste Award from Teresa Bradley

Race to Zero Waste began formally recognizing zero waste efforts in 2023. 

We first printed certificates called the "Zero Waste Awards," and later developed the Sustainability in Action Awards.

In 2023, as part of the Zero Waste Fest celebrations, Race to Zero Waste conferred the Zero Waste Award to Simple for expanding refill options in San Francisco. 

At the inaugural Zero Waste Forum in 2024, Race to Zero Waste conferred two awards. One to the Native American Fiber Program (NAFP), which was accepted by NAFP CEO Fred Briones, and the other to the Zero Waste International Alliance (ZWIA), which was accepted by ZWIA President Rick Anthony. Both of these worthy organizations are moving the needle on zero waste, from promoting natural materials and traditional knowledge to developing globally-applicable zero waste standards. 

The following year, Race to Zero Waste developed a steering committee with Board members to help define the awards further. The Awards Committee took the tagline from our logo, "Sustainability in Action," and named the awards for the type of work we wanted to recognize: those who were showing initiative and making change for a waste-free world. They also defined the three categories for the Awards.

Categories for the 2025 Sustainability in Action Awards: 

  • Emerging Leader Award (15-27 years old): For an individual who has been a beacon for zero waste, environmental justice, and sustainable materials management in their community. They are not required to hold a position in a field, but should have made an impact on people, places, or groups through advocacy, education, passion, or action.
  • Advocacy Award: For an individual or group that has a primary purpose to educate its community around waste reduction, environmental justice, zero waste practices, and has a proven impact.
  • Regenerative Community Award: For communities that go beyond sustainability to actively improve the systems they interact with. These communities prioritize the health of the planet, the prosperity of people, and the vitality of place.

Race to Zero Waste was pleased to receive a number of impressive nominations, and conferred eight awards in the three categories! The 2025 awards were engraved on bamboo plaques. 

The 2025 awardees were: 

Advocacy Award: Deepa Lama and Jessica Namath

Emerging Leader Award: 

  • Anagha Iyer, Broward Sierra Club 
  • Lael Kylin Judson, Rural Roots Louisiana
  • Amanda Di Perna, Debris Free Oceans
  • Allie Donohue, 
  • Michael Karapetian, EARTHDAY.ORG 

2025 Regenerative Community Award: Lisa Clarke

In 2026, Race to Zero Waste added a category to commemorate one of our volunteers who passed away unexpectedly: The Richard 'Dickie' Haskell Outstanding Volunteer Award. This award recognizes an individual that volunteers their time to an environmental non-profit or K-12 school by educating others on recycling, zero waste, clean-ups, reuse, or other waste reduction measures. Dickie Haskell was an educator and volunteer with Race to Zero Waste and other environmental organizations. His passion for volunteering lives on through this award. 

Race to Zero Waste was pleased to work with TechWears to develop the 2026 plaques. 

 

Thank you to our generous sponsors:

  • Klean Kanteen
  • Go2Zero
  • Zero Waste USA
  • ZWIA - Zero Waste International Alliance
    ZWIA - Zero Waste International Alliance
  • Bay Area Bin Support
  • Zero Waste Sonoma
  • R3 Consulting
    R3 Consulting
  • GreenEducation.US
    GreenEducation.US
  • SCS Engineers
    SCS Engineers
  • Rainbow Grocery
    Rainbow Grocery
  • San Francisco Department of the Environment
    San Francisco Department of the Environment
  • ChangeX
    ChangeX
A black man and a white man in safety vests talk and sort waste at bins in front of a Zero Waste Station in front of a large crowd at a festival type event

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