George P. Mitchell - Philanthropy

Philanthropy

Mitchell has signed The Giving Pledge.

According to the National Academies of Science, "In the 1970s helped sponsor the work of Dennis Meadows, whose Club of Rome study The Limits to Growth was a global wake-up call on the pressing need for sustainable energy technologies and food sources worldwide."

Working with Meadows and other national leaders Mitchell created The Woodlands Conference series and the International George and Cynthia Mitchell Prize, both dedicated to sustainable development. He was particularly interested in the role of the business community in creating sustainable societies. The Mitchells also underwrote the National Academies' Our Common Journey: A Transition Toward Sustainability, the 1999 report that defined the role of science and technology in moving toward sustainability. As a follow-up to Our Common Journey and with Mitchell's continued help the National Academies created a long term program committed to advancing science and technology in support of sustainable development. Mitchell also founded the Houston Advanced Research Center that explores strategies for sustainable development at the regional level. He donated part of his wealth to the Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation that supports programs for the efficient and wise use of Earth's resources.

Enabled by Mitchell's donation of $35 million, the Texas A&M University Physics department relocated to two new buildings in late 2009: The George P. and Cynthia W. Mitchell Fundamental Physics and Astronomy Building and the George P. Mitchell Physics Building. This donation is the latest in a series supporting science and the physics department in particular. With previous gifts supporting academic chairs, professorships and the Giant Magellan Telescope project, the Mitchells are Texas A&M's most generous modern benefactors, with donations totaling $44.5 million for the physics department over the as of 2009; by 2011, his total contributions to universities and research organizations had reached $159 million.

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