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USAID to Design New Latin America and Caribbean Regional Environment Program

The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) is pleased to announce the design phase of a new regional biodiversity conservation program for Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). Following on the success of USAID's current LAC regional environmental program, the new program will respond to language in the FY 2006 Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill recommending that USAID "design a successor to the *Parks in Peril Program to develop self-sustaining national park systems by improving economic opportunities for people living near protected areas."

LEGAL LOBSTERS IN NICARAGUA With a relatively modest level of annual funding, the new regional program will need to be focused to be effective. Consequently, the program will address the Congressional directive and complement other USAID environmental investments by focusing on the LAC region's increasingly threatened, globally important coastal and marine biodiversity and related ecosystem services. As the first step in the design process, USAID has contracted a technical consulting firm that will be conducting interviews and providing analysis to USAID in the form of an Opportunities Assessment. Once the assessment is complete, it will be posted on the USAID LAC Environment web page and will serve as one input into the design process, along with additional internal and external consultation and other reviews and studies. It is USAID's policy to award all grants and cooperative agreements competitively in order to allow for broad stakeholder input and the selection of the best possible activities to achieve program objectives. The Agency anticipates initiating a competitive procurement for the new regional environment program in early spring 2007.


*NOTE

The Parks in Peril Program, the largest site-based conservation program in Latin America, is a partnership among USAID, The Nature Conservancy, and in-country civil society organizations in 16 countries. Over the past 16 years, Parks in Peril has dramatically improved the conservation status of 45 protected areas covering over 45 million acres in Latin America and the Caribbean. USAID funding of Parks in Peril will end in 2007. Additional information about the program is available at www.ParksinPeril.org.


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