Leslie Johnston, CEO of the Laudes Foundation, on Driving Systemic Change for Climate Action and a Just Transition
Description
Leslie Johnston, CEO of the Laudes Foundation, delivers an insightful exploration into the transformative work her organisation undertakes to combat climate change and foster a just transition to a sustainable and inclusive economy.
As the leader of a relatively young foundation founded in 2020, Leslie underscores the urgency of addressing the "polycrisis" of climate change, inequality, and economic upheaval. She delves into the foundation’s strategy of targeting industries with outsized impacts, such as fashion, the built environment, and food, to accelerate decarbonisation while prioritising equity and inclusion.
The concept of a just transition emerges as a recurring theme in Leslie’s commentary. She emphasises the importance of ensuring that communities and workers — particularly those who have contributed least to the climate crisis but are most vulnerable to its effects — are central to solutions. In practical terms, this involves advocating for worker rights, building resilience within supply chains, and fostering collaboration among businesses, governments, and civil society.
Leslie highlights examples like Bangladesh, where fashion industry workers face existential threats from rising sea levels, stressing the need for place-based strategies that empower individuals and provide pathways for economic opportunity.
Leslie also addresses the strikingly small percentage of global philanthropy — approximately 2% — that is allocated to climate philanthropy. She challenges the philanthropic sector to adopt a systemic lens, leveraging its resources to influence policy, catalyse private investment, and spur industry transformation.
By funding visionary nonprofits and creating platforms like the Fashion for Good and Built by Nature initiatives, the foundation has successfully convened stakeholders to tackle issues like carbon reduction in supply chains and promoting sustainable building practices.
Partnerships play a pivotal role in these efforts, as Leslie explains. She outlines the foundation's collaborative work with organisations such as the IKEA Foundation to establish Assemble, a donor collaborative focused on decarbonising the built environment, and its involvement in the Just Transition Donor Alliance. These initiatives aim to break down silos among funders, foster learning, and amplify collective impact.
Leslie also touches on the need for innovative financial mechanisms to mobilise the trillions required annually for global decarbonisation. She advocates for tailored financial products, public-private partnerships, and policy interventions to unlock investment at scale. Furthermore, she highlights the importance of sharing knowledge and best practices, pointing to initiatives like the Just Transition Finance Lab at the London School of Economics, which creates tools to guide investors and policymakers.
In her concluding remarks, Leslie encourages individuals to recognise their agency in driving change through conscious consumer choices and urges philanthropic leaders to integrate a climate lens into all aspects of their work. Solving the climate crisis requires an all-hands-on-deck approach, with philanthropy playing a catalytic role in creating a sustainable and equitable future.
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