Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 86— - CLIMATE CHANGE TECHNOLOGY DEPLOYMENT IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES › § 7909
For fiscal year 2010, the United States may give up to $300,000,000 to the Clean Technology Fund. The Secretary of the Treasury must use the United States’ voice and vote at the Fund to make sure no more than 15 percent of Fund money goes to any one country, that countries give the Fund’s governing body an investment plan before money is committed and that the plan will cut national greenhouse gas emissions, and that recipient countries help pay part of public-sector costs (at least 15 percent for countries with “IDA blend” status and at least 25 percent for countries with “IBRD Only” status). Fund help may only be used to deploy clean energy technologies in developing countries, including technical help or policy or institutional reform, and it must produce substantial net reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Definitions (one line each): net reductions — lower greenhouse gas emissions than would have happened without the Fund project, including wider effects when practicable. public sector activities — can include sovereign loans the recipient country takes on to help pay for the plan. clean energy technology — a technology that, compared with common local options, cuts greenhouse gases a lot, does not cause major new health or environmental harms, and either uses renewable energy, greatly boosts energy efficiency in buildings/industry/agriculture or power systems, or makes transportation much more efficient or uses fuels with much lower lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions than fossil fuels.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 7909
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73