Creating accessible and inclusive communities through safer indoor air. Registered charity with the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC).
The Safer Air Project
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The Safer Air Project is a registered charity with the ACNC, and donations over $2 are tax deductible in Australia.
#ImpactOfSaferAir #EOFYGiving #SaferAirProject #IndoorAirQuality #Accessibility #Inclusion
That includes community education, webinars, conferences, and work towards our 2026 Making the invisible visible campaign.
This EOFY, your support will help bring safer air to more people. Help us grow the impact of safer air.
Support us here:
As cooler months bring more viruses, indoor air quality matters. We’ve partnered with The Safer Air Project to create resources on safer indoor air, infection risk and practical steps to reduce spread. Learn more: zurl.co/yBB1X
#ImpactOfSaferAir #Accessibility
That’s why we’re highlighting the impacts the air we breathe can have on productivity at our conference in October. Join us to explore the economic opportunities that exist, and how we can translate the evidence into world-leading, national reform.
Learn more and register: bit.ly/ssa-2026
Indoor air quality is increasingly being recognised as a health, productivity, accessibility and inclusion issue. We’re seeing this in public inquiries, global commitments, research, and more media coverage about the issue.
We’re continuing to grow our advocacy, resources and partnerships.
When indoor air quality is poor, the burden too often falls on individuals and families to assess risk, ask questions, advocate for safer conditions, or even leave altogether.
This is why lived experience is central to our work.
We work to bring these experiences into policy and public health conversations, so indoor air quality is recognised as part of safer and more inclusive shared spaces. Your donation helps us continue this advocacy.
Help us grow the impact of safer air this EOFY.
Donate here:
This Forbes article highlights how our indoor environments can influence how effectively we can think and make decisions. Studied in both controlled and real-world environments, the connection between indoor air quality and performance is measurable.