New grant for wild life conservation launched
A NEW international wildlife conservation fund of £50,000 for grassroot conservationists in Nigeria and other parts of the world has been announced.
The fund, which will support the conservation of endangered species and their habitats across the developing world yearly was launched in London, United Kingdom on January 7, 2016 by the Whitley Fund for Nature and Fondation Segré.
According to a press release signed by Susanna Penn, the newly created Whitley-Segré Conservation Fund provides further funding to previous Whitley Award winners to scale up their successful conservation work, and bring about lasting change for threatened wildlife, local communities and the environment they share.
She said that the “grants in the region of £50,000 per year, over a period of one to three years, are being offered to exceptional grassroots conservationists delivering high-impact projects that are addressing threats to conservation”.
She said” “The first round of funding is now open and recipients will be announced in October 2016. The new Fund is the result of a partnership between UK charity, the Whitley Fund for Nature, and Swiss-based Fondation Segré. Both organisations are contributing 50per cent of the funding available through the new Fund, with Fondation Segré matching the amount raised by the Whitley Fund for Nature.”
WFN Founder, Edward Whitley, said: “we are delighted to announce the new Whitley-Segré Conservation Fund, and the deepening of our partnership with Fondation Segré. For the first time this allows us to offer WFN supporters the chance to double their donation through matched funding, maximising the impact of their support.
“This is a unique opportunity for two committed organisations funding conservation where action is most needed, to learn from one another, and bring about positive change for species, habitats and people.”
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1 Comments
I just finished my project work on Documentation and Conservation of Wild Edible Plants (WEPs) in Ado Ekiti where 10 WEPs were rare. Can the International Wildlife Conservation Fund help carry out my recommendations?
We will review and take appropriate action.