ABOUT THE MILLENNIUM FELLOWSHIP - CLASS OF 2025
United Nations Academic Impact and MCN are proud to partner on the Millennium Fellowship. This year, 60,000+ young leaders applied to join the Class of 2025 on 7,000+ campuses across 170 nations. 290+ campuses worldwide (less than 5%) were selected to host the 4,500+ Millennium Fellows.

UNITED NATIONS ACADEMIC IMPACT AND MCN PROUDLY PRESENT DILLON TALACTAC, A MILLENNIUM FELLOW FOR THE CLASS OF 2025.
Pace University Pleasantville | Pleasantville, United States | Advancing SDG 6, SDG 1, SDG 3, SDG 7, SDG 9, SDG 10, SDG 11, SDG 12, SDG 14, SDG 13, SDG 15, SDG 19, SDG 14: Life Below Water & UNAI 9

" I'm excited to be a Millennium Fellow because collaborating with other students that are working to advance clean water and sustainability is an exciting opportunity. We can truly a make difference in the world and I'm thankful to be a part of that. "
Millennium Fellowship Project: Right-to-Know H2O '25
Student teams from Pace University in New York and Häme University of Applied Sciences (HAMK) in Finland are jointly proposing a partnership we believe unique in MCN history – teams from schools 4,000 miles apart applying separately but collaborating intensively on a bilateral model to address an urgent, inherent principle of SD6: the right to safe water requires the right to know water is safe. We will build upon the work of Pace’s 2024 team which found that the combined population of the world’s 25,000 higher education institutions – an estimated 270 million water users -- would place it fourth on the list of the world’s most populous nations. This statistic alone offers a powerful statement about the need for schools in and out of the MCN network to increase water awareness and influence global policy. Our joint deliverable will be an information and education model that can promptly inform water users of the quality of their water, with a timeline that will include immediately achievable goals, and projected technical innovations. We believe this model will apply not only to colleges and universities, but gain international attention, including at the United Nations itself.
About the Millennium Fellow
Dillon Talactac is a fourth year Information Technology student studying at Pace University. He is passionate about hiking and enjoying the outdoors. By leveraging technology he is dedicated to developing solutions to protect the planet's water sources and ensure that safe water is accessible to communities in need.











