Title 22 › Chapter 32— FOREIGN ASSISTANCE › Subchapter IV— DEBT REDUCTION FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES WITH TROPICAL FORESTS › § 2431g
Allows the Secretary of State, after talking with other federal officials, to make a Conservation Agreement with an eligible country about how that country’s Fund will be run and used. Other parts of the law that say what must be in the agreement and what the managing group must do also apply. Money in each country’s Fund must be managed by a group set up under that country’s laws. That group must include at least one U.S. government appointee, at least one appointee from the country’s government, and people from environmental groups, local community development groups, and scientific/forestry or academic groups. Most members must come from those last groups. Money from the Fund can only pay grants to conserve, keep, and restore tropical forests and coral reefs. Examples of allowed work include parks and protected areas, science-based resource and land management, training, species protection and recovery, medicinal plant research, and helping local livelihoods in ways that protect the resources. Grants go to environmental, forestry, conservation, and indigenous organizations, other local or regional groups, and only in limited cases to the country’s government to improve governance and management (but not to replace the government’s existing spending). Priority goes to projects run by nongovernmental or private groups that include local communities. Any grant over $250,000 needs approval by both the United States and the beneficiary country. If the President finds a country no longer meets the eligibility rules, grants for that country may only go to nongovernmental organizations until the President says otherwise.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 2431g
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60