Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS, CONGRESSES, ETC. › § 262l–3
Requires the Secretary of the Treasury to tell U.S. representatives at the World Bank and other multilateral development banks to push hard for specific environmental and energy policies. The Treasury must work with the Secretary of State to hold talks with governments in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to build support for those environmental goals and must report progress to the Appropriations Committees by March 1, 1993. The Treasury must also send Congress reports by March 1, 1993 and again on March 1, 1994 about how the banks are meeting four benchmarks: sustainable energy (least-cost planning, more energy efficiency and renewables, and dedicated staff for those programs), forest protection (no major logging or damaging projects in undisturbed primary forests without safeguards, support for indigenous rights, and more funding for biodiversity), forced displacement (tracking and fixing resettlement problems by mid-1993 and similar rules at the African Development Bank), and environmental impact assessment (public access and comment on EIAs, applying EIA rules to sector and structural adjustment loans, evaluating global impacts, and having environmental leaders decide needed studies). The Administrator of USAID must keep using the Global Warming Initiative and make sure country programs include forest conservation, energy efficiency, least-cost planning, and renewable energy. At least $650,000,000 of funds for USAID must go to environment and energy work. Within that amount, at least $20,000,000 must support biodiversity (including $5,000,000 for Parks in Peril, $1,500,000 for the NSF’s international biodiversity program, $750,000 for the Neotropical Bird Conservation Initiative, and up to $2,000,000 for Project Noah). At least $15,000,000 must support replicable renewable energy projects and USAID must start at least five major new renewable activities in fiscal year 1993. At least $7,000,000 is for elephant conservation, $25,000,000 for USAID’s Office of Energy, and up to $50,000,000 may go to a “Forests for the Future” effort and a Global Forest Agreement. Other targeted amounts include $50,000,000 for the Global Environment Facility, $10,000,000 total for CORECT and related export/renewable funds, and $55,000,000 for the Global Warming Initiative. USAID funds may pay staff costs for people working on these programs, and at least $15,000,000 under section 2763 must go to African countries for conservation and biodiversity.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 262l–3
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73