Froglife staff were really excited to hear that one of our pond restoration projects based in Glasgow has been short-listed for a prestigious national award at the 2012 Biffa Awards. The ceremony recognises the people who transform their communities and improve the environment through Biffa Award funded projects using Landfill Communities Fund.
Selected from nearly 100 hopeful applicants, Froglife’s Glasgow Living Waters Project will now compete against four other organisations from across the country for the chance to be named winner of the ‘Rebuilding Biodiversity’ category, and receive a £2,000 prize.
Happy volunteers at work on Froglife's Living Waters project in Scotland |
The Biffa Awards ceremony 2012 will be held on September 27 at the Historic Dockyard Chatham, Kent, where all the finalists will be invited to attend a day of celebrating the enthusiasm and commitment of those who dedicate their lives to making a real difference to their community and the environment.
Creating a shelf for plants in Dawsholm Park |
Category winners at the Awards will receive a trophy and prize money of £2,000, which can be used to further develop their project. Each winner then has the chance of being crowned the Overall Winner for 2012, receiving a further £1,000 prize.
“The Biffa Awards are a unique opportunity to reward and recognise the dedicated people who are delivering some of the excellent projects we have funded,” said Gillian French, Biffa Award Programme Manager. “A great deal of the projects we support have a huge and lasting impact on their local community and environment, so to be short-listed for an award is a tremendous achievement in itself. Our judges have a difficult but exciting task ahead in choosing the winners.”
• You can find out more about the £125 million that Biffa Award has given to support environmental and other projects through the Landfill Communities Fund at their website here
• There is more information about our Living Waters scheme on the Froglife website here
• Top tips for revamping and maintain your garden pond are in our Just Add Water booklet available here
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Photos: Richard Bolton and Eilidh Spence
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