Title 22 › Chapter 113— UNITED STATES FOUNDATION FOR INTERNATIONAL CONSERVATION › § 10606
Provide grants to help manage protected and conserved areas and their nearby buffer zones in eligible countries. The Foundation must not buy, own, or lease land there. Grants may go to experienced nonprofit groups, eligible partner governments (unless barred by law), and Indigenous and local communities. Projects must improve management of parks, reserves, marine and coastal areas, corridors, and similar conservation efforts. Each project needs at least $2 from non‑U.S. sources for every $1 the Foundation gives. Projects must have long‑term, binding agreements with governments and local communities that protect local access and resource rights and include free, prior, and informed consent. Projects must use clear performance measures, complete environmental and social checks, involve communities with inclusive governance and grievance procedures, create local economic benefits (for example, profit‑sharing, co‑management, or jobs), and plan to build local capacity to manage the area before or after grant funding ends. Before awarding grants each year, the Board must review and choose eligible countries under its Plan of Action. The review looks at a country’s income level, level of threatened biodiversity or important species/ecosystems, evidence it has protected lands or waters, and whether it can legally receive U.S. aid. Within 5 days after the Board decides, the Executive Director must send Congress a list of eligible countries with detailed reasons (including suitability, the country’s interest and ability to partner, its conservation commitment, and its capacity to make needed reforms) and publish that information in the Federal Register. The Foundation must coordinate with other donors, seek contributions from host governments, focus on poorer communities when practical, and consider each country’s planned resources and project readiness. Grants should help fund site management with stable support for not less than 10 years, show progress on agreed key indicators (like protecting biodiversity and habitats, community economic gains, better site management, and plans for sustained financing), and will be ended if the Board finds a project isn’t meeting the rules or making agreed progress.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
22 U.S.C. § 10606
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60