# Ocean Resilience and Climate Alliance (ORCA)
The Ocean Resilience and Climate Alliance (ORCA) is a philanthropic funder collaborative—not a traditional investment firm—that has mobilized $300 million in commitments to advance ocean-based climate solutions.[1] Rather than deploying capital through equity investments, ORCA operates as a coordinated funding mechanism designed to address the severe capital gap in ocean-climate interventions. The alliance works across seven core programmatic areas, including offshore wind acceleration, shipping decarbonization, blue carbon habitat restoration, ocean diplomacy, carbon research, and coastal community empowerment.[1]
ORCA's mission centers on making ocean ecosystems more resilient while ensuring that climate solutions are equitable and benefit frontline coastal communities most impacted by ocean-climate issues.[1] The collaborative brings together philanthropies, nonprofit organizations, local communities, and Indigenous Peoples to tackle what many consider an overlooked but critical dimension of climate action: marine sectors are estimated to comprise up to one-third of the necessary global emissions reductions.[1]
ORCA was established as an anchor collaboration between Oceankind and Builders Vision, with Matt Elliott serving as Executive Director of Oceankind and a key anchor funder.[1] The coalition was deliberately designed to coordinate and concentrate philanthropic capital into ocean-based climate solutions, recognizing that the ocean sector—despite its climate significance—has historically received fragmented funding attention compared to terrestrial climate interventions.
The alliance gained institutional legitimacy through support from major foundations, including the Rivian Foundation, which provided founding support through the National Philanthropic Trust to help launch the collaborative.[3] This multi-stakeholder approach reflects a recognition that scaling ocean climate solutions requires alignment across diverse funding sources and implementation partners rather than siloed efforts.
ORCA's primary differentiator is its laser focus on ocean-based climate interventions at scale. The collaborative concentrates capital into high-impact areas where ocean solutions can meaningfully reduce global emissions:
Unlike traditional investment vehicles, ORCA operates as a funder collaborative that convenes philanthropies, civil society, Indigenous Peoples, and local communities.[5] This structure enables coordinated capital deployment while maintaining focus on equity and frontline community benefit—a critical differentiator in climate philanthropy where extractive or top-down approaches often undermine long-term resilience.
ORCA's reach spans from the Arctic to the tropics, with particular emphasis on Asia-Pacific coastal adaptation and sustainable blue economy development.[2] This geographic diversity reflects recognition that ocean-climate solutions must be locally contextualized while operating at global scale.
ORCA occupies a unique position in the climate finance ecosystem as a gap-filling mechanism rather than a venture capital player. While climate tech venture funding has grown substantially, ocean-based solutions have historically been underfunded relative to their climate mitigation potential. ORCA addresses this by:
Catalyzing Institutional Capital: By demonstrating coordinated philanthropic commitment ($300 million), ORCA creates proof points that attract additional capital from development finance institutions, impact investors, and government climate funds.[2]
Bridging Science and Implementation: The alliance connects climate research with on-the-ground coastal adaptation, ensuring that interventions are both scientifically rigorous and practically implementable in vulnerable communities.
Influencing Policy & Diplomacy: ORCA convenes at major international forums like the Our Ocean conference in Athens to shape global ocean-climate policy and coordinate diplomatic efforts around ocean governance.[1]
The timing is critical: as global climate commitments intensify and the IPCC emphasizes nature-based solutions, ocean-based interventions are transitioning from niche to mainstream climate strategy. ORCA's coordinated approach helps accelerate this transition by demonstrating that ocean solutions can be scaled, financed, and implemented equitably.
ORCA represents a maturation of climate philanthropy toward systems-level coordination rather than isolated grant-making. As the collaborative continues to deploy its $300 million commitment and potentially mobilizes additional capital, several dynamics will shape its trajectory:
Scaling Beyond Philanthropy: The most significant opportunity lies in ORCA's ability to catalyze blended finance structures that combine philanthropic capital with development finance, green bonds, and impact investment. Success here could unlock multiples of additional capital for ocean climate solutions.
Coastal Community Outcomes: ORCA's emphasis on equity and frontline community benefit will be tested as projects scale. The collaborative's influence will ultimately be measured not just in emissions reductions but in whether coastal communities experience tangible resilience gains and economic opportunity.
Policy Influence: As ORCA convenes at international forums and builds evidence around ocean-based solutions, its ability to shape climate policy—particularly around shipping decarbonization and offshore wind—will amplify its impact beyond direct funding.
The ocean-climate space remains dramatically underfunded relative to its potential. ORCA's coordinated approach demonstrates that philanthropic capital, when concentrated strategically and deployed equitably, can catalyze the systems change necessary to unlock ocean-based climate solutions at the scale required.