From preserving marine biodiversity to protecting tropical forests from palm oil developers, the six recipients of a prestigious environmental award are “extraordinary individuals who have moved mountains to protect our planet.”

“Each of them has selflessly stood up to stop injustice, become a leader when leadership was critical, and vanquished powerful adversaries who would desecrate our planet.”
—Susie Gelman, Goldman Environmental Foundation

That’s according to the Goldman Environmental Foundation, which for the past 30 years has honored grassroots activists from across the globe. This year’s winners, described on Twitter by fellow activist Bill McKibben as “a great collection of #KeepItInTheGround leaders,” were announced Monday.

Each of the six recipients hails from one of the world’s inhabited continents.

Environmental lawyer is being recognized for his successful efforts to stop palm oil plantation developers from destroying forests vital to biodiversity in his home country of Liberia. For safety reasons—and after his government threatened to arrest Brownell for his activism—he now lives in exile in the United States.

Brownell told The Guardian about an encounter with private security guards in 2016.

“They threatened to cut off my head, to eat my heart, and drink out of my skull,” Brownell said. “They began a war dance around the car. They were drinking and said they would cannibalize me.”

Brownell added that receiving the honor has made him optimist about returning to Liberia in the future: “I hope this award will help change the minds of people in Liberia so we find more allies to speak to the government and the company. We need to find a way to engage with them so I can go home.”

, of Mongolia, was selected for her work to establish the Tost Tosonbumba Nature Reserve in the South Gobi Desert—which is home to the snow leopard, a vulnerable species threatened by mining in the area. Due in part to pressure from Agvaantseren, the Mongolian government has canceled all mining licenses in the reserve.

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—a Mapuche, Chile’s largest indigenous group—organized the people of Araucanía to block the construction of two hydroelectric projects that could have diverted more than 500 million gallons of water daily from the Cautín River, with dire consequences for the regional ecosystem. Curamil was arrested for his activism last year and remains in jail.

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