Join us for a journey of inspiration and innovation at the most exciting sustainability event of the year! Registration for the event is open.
What to expect
Inspirational speeches Grand reveal: The winner of Sininen pallo 2024 Networking, snacks and cocktails
When and where
December 4th 17-19 Think Corner, Yliopistonkatu 4, Helsinki
Who can participate
The event is open for all and free of charge. Please register by 28.11.2024 here.
Privacy policy
Privacy policy and use of cookies at sininenpallo.fi
Privacy policy in accordance with § 10 of the Personal Data Act (523/1999). In this privacy policy, we will describe how we process personal data in the following contexts: cookies.
Data controller
Kaskas Media Oy on behalf of its customers:
Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland Tiina and Antti Herlin foundation
Contact person: Kaskas Media Oy / Creative Director Liisa Mayow liisa@kaskasmedia.fi
Cookies
We use cookies at sininenpallo.fi website for the tracking and analysis of the website’s usage and for other functionalities. The use of cookies can be blocked in your browser.
We use the Google Analytics service to track our site usage. The purpose of the tracking is to collect statistics on, for example, the number of visitors to the site and the most popular content.
Google Tag Manager is used for management of tracking tags, such as Facebook pixels.
This information is in a form that cannot be associated with any individual user unless additional details are also available. We cannot combine information collected using cookies with any specific individual, and it also takes further measures to ensure that the information remains anonymous. For example, one stage in using the tools of web analytics involves removing numbers from a user’s IP address so that nobody can personally identify the user.
Our planet is suffering from an ecological crisis. We have to solve it together. The Sininen Pallo (Blue Globe) award is a recognition for groundbreaking, scalable technology or scientific research that helps humankind brave the crisis.
Join us to see who these problem solvers are and what kind of fields they work in in order to create a better future for our planet.
The 100 000 euro award can be given to any Finnish organization, company, NGO, research group or private citizen regardless of the language of their work who create scalable solutions for solving the ecological crisis currently threatening us all.
How the award unfolds
The prize is awarded by the Tiina and Antti Herlin foundation, the Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation and the scholarly society Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland SLS.
This year’s Sininen Pallo Environmental Prize is awarded for an activity, project or research that reduces overconsumption. We are now seeking nominations for the award.
The prize is awarded to a group or individual in Finland who has developed measures to reduce overconsumption. This could be a new technology, a social innovation or a cultural change that contributes to a better life, society, practice or sustainable business within the limits of what our planet can offer.
Nominees for the award are shortlisted by a board of experts continuously monitoring the field. Expert members for the year 2024 are Kati Ihamäki, Vice President Sustainability and Public Affairs at Fiskars Group, Riikka Suominen, journalist specialising in environmental issues, and Michael Lettenmeier, Postdoctoral Researcher at Helsinki University.
The prize is awarded annually and the first prize was given in 2021 to the innovators of vegetarian proteins Pulled oats and Härkis: Reetta Kivelä, Maija Itkonen, Jiang Zhong-Qing, Leena Saarinen ja Tarja Ollila. The 2022 Sininen Pallo winners were Ali Harlin and Petri Alava, the innovators of Infinna fiber, which is made out of recycled clothing waste. Winners of the Sininen pallo 2023 were the founders of Kamupak: Iida Miettinen, Karri Lehtonen and Eero Heikkinen.
The winner of 2024 will be announced in Helsinki in December 2024.
Behind the award
A hundred years ago, a young engineer who loved the outdoors graduated from the Helsinki University of Technology. Three years later, two other young hopefuls from the Mechanical Engineering Department, one of whom had originally wanted to be a farmer, graduated with the same degree. The other spent all his free time at the helm of a sailboat in the Finnish Archipelago Sea.
The three young engineers each pursued a career in industry and technology, while driving a new development in their homeland typical for that time. They also shared a deep appreciation for nature.
At the time, our country faced very different challenges than it does today. But the challenges were still great. The current environmental crisis is the most difficult challenge in human history and one that the three engineers would most certainly have wanted to solve.
Today, each of their life’s work is honoured by a foundation or fund that supports environmental research and the solutions that emerge from it. Now the three foundations are joining forces to reward the builders of the sustainable future in turn.
The three future builders highlight people who are builders of hope and a more sustainable future
Photo: Novafoto / SLS, Henrik Höijer’s archive.
Henrik Höijer (1892–1984) graduated from the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the Helsinki University of Technology in 1921. He carved out a career as technical director of the Labor cooperative, the Swedish equivalent of Hankkija. Höijer was a keen scout and nature enthusiast. One of the largest funds of the Svenska Litteratursällskapet is the Ingrid, Margit and Henrik Höijer Fund II, which aims, among other things, to support individuals or organisations researching environmental protection and technology.
Heikki H. Herlin (1901–1989) graduated as a Master of Science in engineering from the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the Helsinki University of Technology in 1924. Herlin, who had the honorary title of Vuorineuvos, made his life’s work leading the Kone Ltd. The family farm in Thorsvik, Kirkkonummi, was then and still is used for farming. The Tiina and Antti Herlin Foundation is a charitable foundation that focuses its resources in 2020–2025 on solutions to the global environmental crisis, in particular the rapid reduction of emissions.
Tor Nessling (1901–1971) graduated as a Master of Science in engineering from the Mechanical Engineering Department of the Helsinki University of Technology in 1924, the same year as Heikki Herlin. Nessling, who also had the honorary title of Vuorineuvos, spent his working life in the car industry, but spent his free time with his wife Maj Nessling at the Finnish Archipelago Sea, in the woods or birdwatching. The Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation seeks systemic solutions for an ecologically sustainable future by providing support for research, possibilities for encounters and scientific knowledge for the use of society.
Winners
Winners of the Sininen pallo (Blue globe) 2023 are the founders of Kamupak, Iida Miettinen, Karri Lehtonen and Eero Heikkinen
Winners of Sininen pallo 2023: IIda Miettinen, Karri Lehtonen and Eero Heikkinen.
The Sininen pallo was awarded for the third time on 30.11.2023. The winners offer scalable solutions to overcome the environmental crisis. The award is presented by the Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation, the Tiina and Antti Herlin Foundation and Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland.
The 2023 Sininen pallo was awarded to the three founders of Kamupak: Iida Miettinen, Karri Lehtonen and Eero Heikkinen. The total value of the prize is €100 000 and will be shared equally between the winners. The solution developed by Kamupak’s founders reduces the need for environmentally damaging disposable takeaway food packaging and allows consumers to choose a more sustainable packaging for their takeaway. Kamupak’s solution is to provide restaurants with reusable packaging that stays in circulation through a digital deposit.
“With the Sininen pallo award, we want to highlight that consumer behaviour change has a significant role in overcoming the ecological crisis. But the responsibility cannot rest on the shoulders of individuals. That’s why we want to reward innovations that enable and facilitate large-scale behaviour change,” says Katja Bargum, Science and Executive Director of the Nessling Foundation, who chaired the prize’s working group.
Reducing single-use food packaging is important for many reasons. Food packaging waste is difficult to recycle for hygiene reasons and therefore often ends up in incineration or landfill. Disposable packaging is so widely used that even making it from renewable raw materials is not a sustainable solution in the long term, because so much raw material is needed. Long-term use of takeaway food packaging reduces the pressure to use bio-based raw materials such as wood for packaging.
The Sininen pallo jury sees that, if successfully scaled up, the winning solution could pave the way for the sustainability of the takeaway and fast food sector.
“We are overwhelmed and grateful for this significant environmental recognition, which shows us that we have spent our energy on the right thing. We hope that this recognition will also encourage other entrepreneurs to question established consumption patterns for a more sustainable and circular planet,” says one of Kamupak’s founders Iida Miettinen.
Read the long award citation below
The winners of Sininen pallo, Blå globen 2023 are boldly tackling a big problem: getting rid of environmentally damaging and disposable takeaway food packaging.
Food packaging waste is difficult to recycle for hygiene reasons. The solution that we are awarding today, allows consumers to choose more sustainable and reusable packaging for their takeaway foods.
The winners have succeeded in creating a business model, with a digital platform and innovative logistics, that works in a dispersed restaurant market. They have also calculated how much their business model reduces waste and carbon emissions compared to single-use packaging.
At the moment, disposable packaging is used in such huge quantities that making it from renewable raw materials is not a sustainable solution in the long term. Long-term use of takeaway food packaging reduces the pressure to use bio-based raw materials such as wood as packaging material.
This winning innovation shows leadership, as it already responds to a new EU regulation to reduce single-use packaging, which is only just coming into force.
Sininen pallo Blå globen
An award that celebrates the builders of hope and a more sustainable future.
We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “accept all cookies”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent. Privacy policy
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.