Title 22Foreign Relations and IntercourseRelease 119-73

§262l–1 Sustainable economic growth and management of natural resources; environmental impact of loans; pest management; addition of trained professionals; “early warning system”

Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS, CONGRESSES, ETC. › § 262l–1

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Require the Secretary of the Treasury to tell U.S. representatives at the World Bank and other multilateral development banks to push those banks to back environmentally sustainable economic growth and better management of natural resources. They must add and train staff with ecology expertise, make management plans and environmental reviews for all projects, involve host-country environmental and health officials plus local groups and indigenous peoples in project planning, shift more lending toward environmentally helpful projects (like small-scale farming, watershed work, energy efficiency, and renewable energy), and compare the costs of new power plants with the cost of improving energy efficiency. The Treasury must also push the banks and, when appropriate, the IMF to require country lending plans to analyze effects on natural resources and indigenous land rights, to support policy lending that improves resource management and biodiversity protection, and to promote conservation of wetlands, tropical forests, and other special ecosystems. Require the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of State, and the AID Administrator to start actions and talks with other donors. By March 30, 1988, State and AID must begin talks to help add environmental and socio-cultural experts to the Inter‑American, Asian, and African Development Banks and provide staff or funding. AID must keep and improve an "early warning system" so U.S. posts review MDB loan impacts before approval, report economic and environmental risks and mitigation ideas (and share unclassified findings publicly), and make a list of proposed loans likely to cause harm to be given to the Committees on Appropriations by April 1, 1988 and then every six months. If reviews find harms, Treasury must ask U.S. bank directors to seek changes to remove or reduce them. The AID health and environment committee must report to the Appropriations Committees by February 1, 1988. The Secretary of State must send a report by August 1, 1988 on a strategy for using U.S. foreign aid to tackle resource problems; that report must identify the agencies involved, describe their policies and structures, and assess how U.S. funds can best be used.

Full Legal Text

Title 22, §262l–1

Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)It is the policy of the United States that participation in international financial institutions is predicated on the implementation of programs to promote environmentally sustainable economic growth and sustainable management of natural resources. The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Directors of the Multilateral Development Banks (MDB’s) to continue to vigorously promote a commitment of these institutions to—
(1)add appropriately trained professional staff with expertise, and rigorously strengthen existing staffs’ training in ecology and related areas;
(2)develop and implement management plans to ensure systematic environmental review of all projects;
(3)fully inform and involve host country environmental and health officials (Federal and local) and nongovernmental environmental and indigenous peoples organizations at all stages of the project cycle in environmentally sensitive projects as well as in policy based lending to ensure the active participation of local communities and non-governmental organizations in the planning of projects that may adversely affect them;
(4)substantially increase the proportion of lending supporting environmentally beneficial projects and project components, including but not limited to technical assistance for environmental ministries and institutions, resource rehabilitation projects and project components, protection of indigenous peoples, and appropriate light capital technology projects. Other examples of such projects include small scale mixed farming and multiple cropping, agroforestry, programs to promote kitchen gardens, watershed management and rehabilitation, high yield wood lots, integrated pest management systems, dune stabilization programs, programs to improve energy efficiency, energy efficient technologies such as small scale hydro projects, solar, wind and biomass energy systems, rural and mobile telecommunications systems, and improved efficiency and management of irrigation systems; and
(5)conduct analyses of the comparative costs of new generating facilities with the cost of increasing energy efficiency in the project service area.
(b)The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Directors of the MDB’s and, where appropriate, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to—
(1)promote the requirement that all country lending strategies, policy based loans and adjustment programs contain analyses of the impact of such activities on the natural resources, potential for sustainable development, and legal protections for the land rights of indigenous peoples;
(2)promote the establishment of programs of policy-based lending in order to improve natural resource management, environmental quality, and protection of biological diversity;
(3)seek a commitment of these institutions to promote the conservation of wetlands, tropical forests, and other unique biological and highly productive ecosystems.
(c)
(d)In order to promote sustainable and non-chemical dependent agriculture, the Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Directors of the MDB’s to initiate discussions with other directors of the MDB’s to propose that policies be established that integrated pest management and biological control of pests be a preferential and priority approach to pest management on all bank sponsored agricultural projects.
(e)The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director to the International Monetary Fund to promote the requirement that the IMF conduct an in-depth analysis of the impact of its adjustment policies and conditionality of its lending facilities on the environment, public health, natural resources and indigenous people.
(f)No later than March 30, 1988, the Secretary of State and the Administrator of the Agency for International Development shall initiate discussions with other donor nations, to explore ways in which said donor nations can support the addition of professionals trained in environmental and socio-cultural impact analysis to the Inter-American Development Bank, Asian Development Bank and African Development Bank. On the basis of such discussions the Secretary of State and the Administrator of the Agency for International Development shall provide resources, including professional staff on loan, and/or financial support, to ensure with other donor nations the addition of sufficient staff trained in environmental and socio-cultural impact analysis to each of the above named regional development banks.
(g)The Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of State, in cooperation with the Administrator of the Agency for International Development, shall conduct bilateral and multilateral discussions with other members of the MDB’s to further strengthen the environmental performance of each bank. These discussions shall include, but not be limited to organizational, administrative and procedural arrangements to remove impediments to the efficient and effective management of assistance programs necessary to protect and ensure the sustainable use of natural resources and to carry out such assistance programs in consultation with affected local communities.
(h)The Administrator of the Agency for International Development, in consultation with the Secretaries of Treasury and State, shall continue, and work to enhance, the operation of the “early warning system”, by—
(1)instructing overseas missions of the Agency for International Development and embassies of the United States to analyze the impacts of Multilateral Development Bank loans well in advance of a loan’s approval. Such reviews shall address the economic viability of the project; adverse impacts on the environment, natural resources, public health, and indigenous peoples; and recommendations as to measures, including alternatives, that could eliminate or mitigate adverse impacts. If not classified under the national security system of classification, such information shall be made available to the public;
(2)compiling a list of proposed Multilateral Development Bank loans likely to have adverse impacts on the environment, natural resources, public health, or indigenous peoples. The list shall contain the information identified in paragraph (1), shall be updated in consultation with interested members of the public, and shall be made available to the Committees on Appropriations by April 1, 1988 and semiannually thereafter; and
(3)creating a cooperative mechanism for sharing information collected through the “early warning system” with interested donor and borrowing nations and encouraging the Multilateral Development Banks to institute a similar system.
(i)If a review required by subsection (h) identifies adverse impacts to the environment, natural resources, or indigenous peoples, the Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director of the appropriate MDB to seek changes to the project necessary to eliminate or mitigate those impacts.
(j)The Committee on Health and Environment of the Agency for International Development, called for in section 262l(i) of this title, shall report its findings to the Committees on Appropriations by February 1, 1988.
(k)The Secretary of State, in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury, the Administrator of the Agency for International Development, other appropriate Federal agencies, and interested members of the public, shall prepare and submit to the Committees on Appropriations and the appropriate authorizing committees by August 1, 1988, a report on a comprehensive strategy for maximizing the use of foreign assistance provided by the United States through multilateral and bilateral development agencies to address natural resources problems, such as desertification, tropical deforestation, the loss of wetlands, soil conservation, preservation of wildlife and biological diversity, estuaries and fisheries, croplands and grasslands. The report shall include, but not be limited to—
(1)an identification of the multilateral and bilateral agencies funded in part or in whole by the United States Government, whose activities have, or could have, a significant impact on sustainable natural resource use, and the rights and welfare of indigenous people, in the developing countries;
(2)a description of the internal policies and procedures by which each of these agencies addresses these issues, as well as a description of their own organizational structures for doing so;
(3)an assessment of how the funds contributed by the United States to these agencies can best be used in the future to address these issues.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Codification Section is from the Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 1988. Section was formerly classified to section 262l of this title.

Amendments

1989—Subsec. (c). Pub. L. 101–240 struck out subsec. (c) which related to “debt for conservation” initiatives.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

22 U.S.C. § 262l–1

Title 22Foreign Relations and Intercourse

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73