89 Countries Will Lose UK Conservation Funding As Darwin Initiative Cuts Budgets, Programs - Africa Hardest Hit
One of the UKs longest-standing funds for global nature protection is being drastically cut back, the Guardian has learned. At least 89 countries will lose eligibility for funding for biodiversity projects under the Darwin Initiative, in a round of cuts that conservationists warned would put species and habitats in jeopardy, and set back global efforts to halt the precipitous decline in nature.
The Guardian understands that the regions to be dropped include most of Africa, central Asia and parts of Latin America. Countries such as Argentina, Iran, Sudan, Chad, Mali and Angola would lose out. Armenia, which is hosting the next conference under the UN convention on biodiversity this October, will also be excluded.
At a time when governments have committed to CBD agreements to scale international biodiversity finance to $30 billion a year by 2030, continued cuts and restrictions risk undermining trust that those promises will actually be delivered, said Andrew Terry, ZSLs Director of Conservation and Policy. For decades, the Darwin Initiative has been one of the UKs most important programmes for supporting wildlife, improving livelihoods and tackling climate change in some of the regions that need support most. But reductions to the UKs international aid budget and the removal of eligibility for 89 countries mean locally led organisations are losing vital backing at a time when communities and ecosystems are already under growing pressure. Projects funded by the Darwin Initiative are the frontline of efforts to protect communities from climate and ecosystem breakdown, and this is exactly the moment they should be strengthened, not scaled back.
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It is not yet clear by how much the overall Darwin Initiative funding will be reduced, although the Guardian understand that existing funds will not be cut. News of the axe comes just a week after the UK hosted a big international aid conference, attended by more than 50 countries, at which climate and nature spending were celebrated. The shrinking of the Darwin Initiative is likely to be the first of many cuts to nature projects this year. As the Guardian revealed earlier this year, as well as cutting climate finance to £2bn a year, from £11.6bn over five years under the previous settlement, ministers are ending the earmark within the climate finance target for at least £3bn to be spent on nature.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/may/29/cuts-uk-fund-global-nature-protection-alarm-conservationists