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News & Events

PRESS RELEASE: Belize Fund Awards $250,000 in Emergency Response Grants to BTIA and BHA to tackle Sargassum

(City of Belmopan, August 28, 2025) – Today, the Belize Fund for a Sustainable Future awarded Emergency Response Grants totalling BZ$250,000 to the Belize Tourism Industry Association (BTIA) and the Belize Hotel Association (BHA), to help address the worsening sargassum emergency impacting people, ecosystems, and livelihoods. The emergency funding is equally distributed between the BTIA and BHA, with each organization receiving BZ$125,000 to support affected hotels in San Pedro, Caye Caulker, Hopkins, Seine Bight, Placencia, and other offshore islands. The Funds will be used to support sargassum removal through equipment rental, hiring of personnel, and safe disposal. This intervention will also help maintain cleaner beaches for both residents and visitors. ā€œBeyond tourism impacts, decomposing sargassum creates serious respiratory health risks for coastal communities, kills marine life through oxygen depletion, contaminates our waters, and threatens the livelihoods of fishermen and other coastal workers,ā€ expressed Dr. Leandra Cho-Ricketts, Executive Director of the Belize Fund. ā€œWhile we cannot solve this emergency alone, we want to help reduce its immediate impacts on both our environment and our people.ā€ The Signing Representatives were: • Dr. Leandra Cho-Ricketts (Belize Fund) • Ms. Linette Canto (BTIA) • Mr. Reynaldo Malik (BHA) The two-month intervention operates through a re-granting mechanism, allowing BTIA and BHA to distribute funds directly to the most severely affected hotels in coastal areas where they are needed most urgently.

Opportunities

Vacancy for Project Officer

The Belize Fund for a Sustainable Future is seeking a highly skilled and motivated Project Officer to support the implementation of our Blue Bonds Program and strengthen the impact of our conservation and community-based initiatives. If you’re passionate about sustainable development, marine conservation, and supporting partners across Belize, this role is for you! šŸ’¼šŸŒæšŸ¬ Key Responsibilities: Minimum Requirements: ā—¾ Bachelor’s degree in management, business administration (project-focused), or a related areaā—¾ At least 3 years of project management experience relevant to this roleĀ ā—¾ Strong communication, analytical, and organizational skillsā—¾ Familiarity with biodiversity conservation issuesā—¾ Proficiency in Microsoft Office Suiteā—¾ Valid driver’s license (field travel required)Ā  šŸ“… Application Deadline: December 15th, 2025 šŸ“„ Submit a cover letter, resume, and two references to:jobs@belizefund.bz šŸ”—Download the full Terms of Reference: #ConservationJobs #BelizeFund #ProjectOfficer #BlueBonds #SustainableFuture #HiringNow #BelizeJobs #MarineConservation

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News & Events

Belizean Women Lead Blue Revolution Through Seaweed Farming

Off the coast of Placencia, women are redefining what it means to work with the sea. Through the Belize Women’s Seaweed Farmers Association, they are transforming a traditional practice into sustainable businesses that support families, protect marine ecosystems, and strengthen Belize’s blue economy. From seaweed gels and scrubs to soaps and natural skincare, their products are creating waves of opportunity both locally and internationally. But this story goes beyond seaweed. It’s about women breaking barriers in the maritime world, inspiring the next generation of girls to dive into conservation, science, and seafaring with confidence and purpose. The Belize Fund for a Sustainable Future, established as a private conservation trust fund under the Belize Blue Bonds, is proud to finance and support initiatives like this. By channeling resources directly to community-based organizations, the Belize Fund is helping women, youth, and coastal communities thrive while safeguarding our ocean’s future. This feature is part of the ā€œFinancing for Belize’s Ocean Spaceā€ news series—stories that bring to life how conservation finance is driving resilience, innovation, and sustainable livelihoods across Belize. #BelizeFund #WomenInSeaweed #BlueEconomy #MarineConservation #SustainableFutures šŸŽ„ Produced in partnership with and by Greater Belize Media/ News 5 Live.

News & Events

Belize Fund at RedLAC Congress 2025: Shaping the Future of Sustainable Ocean Finance

The Belize Fund joined Conservation Trust Funds (CTFs) from across Latin America and the Caribbean at RedLAC Congress 2025, sharing lessons, innovations, and regional priorities for scaling sustainable finance. As a network of environmental funds committed to advancing effective conservation financing, RedLAC continues to play a critical role in shaping how countries safeguard biodiversity while supporting community resilience. Driving Better Impact Reporting for Conservation On September 28, 2025, Program Manager JosuĆ© Oliva and Project Officer Patty Pate participated in a workshop on Impact Reporting for Conservation Trust Funds, hosted by The Nature Conservancy. During the session, JosuĆ© shared how the Belize Fund is strengthening its systems to measure, track, and communicate results under the Belize Blue Bonds and Debt-for-Nature Swap. He emphasized three pillars guiding our approach: Through continuous learning and partnership, the Belize Fund remains committed to transparent, results-driven reporting that shows how sustainable financing creates meaningful change. Blue Finance for Locally-led Action RedLAC focused on the urgent need for sustainable ocean finance, especially as coastal communities face growing climate risks. With nearly 40% of the world’s population living near vulnerable coasts, our regional CTFs are proving that investing in nature is the smartest choice. Smart Financing for a Sustainable Future On October 2, 2025, our Executive Director, Dr. Leandra Cho-Ricketts, joined the panel “Green Bonds and Blue Bonds: Smart Financing for a Sustainable Future.” Dr. Ricketts reflected on key challenges in ocean conservation and how they guide our work at the Belize Fund—from measuring the real impact of the funding we provide to using targeted communications that amplify results and reach the people who matter most. Belize Fund Joins RedLAC’s Executive Committee A proud milestone for Belize—Dr. Leandra Cho-Ricketts has been elected to the RedLAC Executive Committee, the network’s core working body. In this role, she will work alongside regional leaders to: This achievement reflects Belize’s growing leadership in conservation financing and our commitment to regional collaboration and innovation. Looking Ahead RedLAC Congress 2025 underscored the transformative potential of sustainable financing across the Caribbean and Latin America. By combining scientific evidence, strong monitoring, and effective communications, as well as elevating community-led conservation, we are happy to contribute to regional efforts that champion approaches that uplift people while protecting nature.

News & Events

TASA successfully concludes two-year project, fusing tradition and technology

Managing one of Belize’s most important marine treasures, the Turneffe Atoll Marine Reserve, requires dedication, innovation, collaboration, and sustainable financing. Over the past two years, the Turneffe Atoll Sustainability Association (TASA) has transformed how marine conservation is done in Belize. Blending traditional knowledge with technology, TASA has strengthened enforcement, improved reef monitoring, and deepened engagement with fishers and coastal communities. Through the project, TASA achieved remarkable results: The Belize Fund for a Sustainable Future is proud to have supported this work with a BZD $831,788 grant, helping TASA scale up its digital monitoring tools and advance Belize’s blue economy through stronger, smarter, and more inclusive conservation practices.

News & Events

BTIA Empowers Youth With Marine Conservation Curriculum Across Southern Belize

Today, we congratulate the Belize Tourism Industry Association (BTIA) for successfully completing its pilot project ā€œDeveloping the Next Generation of Marine Conservationistsā€ across eight communities in southern Stann Creek (Independence, Red Bank, San Juan, George Town, Maya Mopan, Santa Cruz, Seine Bight, and Placencia). Supported by BZ$80,029 from the Belize Fund for a Sustainable Future, this project aimed to inspire students, empower tour guides, and strengthen community stewardship through awareness, skills, and pride in protecting Belize’s marine environment. Key achievements: If you’d like to learn how this curriculum can be adapted in other communities or schools, send us a message. Let’s help more young people connect to our ocean. _#BelizeFund#OceanConservation#SustainableFinance#CoastalCommunities#BlueEconomy#Biodiversity#SustainableFishing#ClimateResilience#SaveOurOceans

News & Events

Public Awareness & Recognition Survey

We want to strengthen how we communicate about protecting and conserving Belize’s marine and coastal resources, and we need your help. 🌊 Take a few minutes to complete our survey and tell us how we can better support your efforts and keep you informed and engaged. šŸ’¬ You can access the link here: šŸ”— https://forms.office.com/r/RM52jkYKKj

News & Events

Changing People, Plastics, and Possibilities for Belize’s Ocean: Inside Sea of Life’s Plastic Solution Academy

A Shift at Wesley College The plastic water pouch crinkles in a student’s hand at Wesley College in Belize City. Just one year ago, these ā€œshilling wataā€ pouches were everywhere, stacked in bins and across the compound, tossed after every break. Now? They are rare. In 2024, Sea of Life (SoL) piloted Belize City’s first refillable campus, a system that replaces single-use plastics with refill water stations, at Wesley College. Since then, the school cut plastic pouch use by over 85 percent, raised over BZ$10,000 for its own programs, and parents are saving about BZ$300 per year through low-cost, unlimited on-campus water. And the Caribbean Sea, just beyond the campus, is getting a break from thousands of pieces of plastic that used to end up in the water. People First: SoL’s Approach to Conservation Plastic pollution has joined climate change and biodiversity loss as a major environmental crisis of our time. Addressing it can feel bigger than any one community. For countries like Belize, dependent on the ocean, the stakes couldn’t be higher. Yet we continue to import, consume, and struggle to manage the plastic waste that remains. For Executive Director Paulita Bennett-Martin, the solution begins with people: invest in them first, and the ocean benefits for the long run. ā€œWe saw a gap,ā€ she explains. ā€œConservation often counts hectares protected and miles of sea secured, then tells people it will benefit them later. We asked: what if we invest in people now, skills, livelihoods, confidence, and let that transform the environment over time?ā€ With a BZ$150,000 grant over 24 months from the Belize Fund, SoL is scaling its Plastic Solution Academy, a hands-on program where Belizeans learn to turn plastic problems into ocean-friendly products and real businesses. Innovation Through the Plastic Solution Academy Growing Momentum Across the Country This year, 15 Academy graduates from five districts pitched market-ready ideas. Two fellows are now prototyping solutions that could spread across Belize’s coastal businesses and tourism industry. One team, Zero Belize, is developing an alternative thin film to replace single-use plastics, made from sargassum, the invasive seaweed that washes up on our beaches. Another, led by Belizean travel influencer 501 Bae, is designing a resort-quality tote bag line to replace plastics in hotel rooms. It is a Belize-made signature item for eco-tourism, ā€œlike a bathrobe: if you love it, you keep it.ā€ ā€œWe’re in the research and development phase,ā€ Paulita notes. ā€œWe’re connecting fellows with makers already supplying high-end eco-resorts so the products meet that standard.ā€ Bold Targets, Broader Movement, and Multi-Year Funding “This multi-year support is empowering,” Paulita says of Belize Fund’s grant. ā€œIt gives stability—to not be in hunt-and-gather mode all the time. We can build, experiment, and think beyond the next quarter. We have breathing room to innovate and give the best impact possible, rather than constantly scrambling for survival.ā€ The targets are bold: eliminate one million single-use plastics per year in Belize by 2028. At the same time, SoL aims to build a wider circle of ocean stewards—entrepreneurs, students, resort teams, and parents—who carry the work forward. ā€œWe can’t rely only on NGOs or the professionally trained conservationists,ā€ Paulita emphasizes. For Paulita, conservation lives in classrooms, small businesses, and seaside communities. It’s about building a movement where everyday Belizeans see themselves as ocean stewards. ā€œWe need more political capital across the culture,ā€ she says. ā€œOur job is to put tools, training, and confidence into the hands of people who care.ā€ A Growing Community of Ocean Stewards At Wesley College, the change is visible. Three more schools are next. And across Belize, more people are starting to see themselves as part of the solution.

News & Events

What does it really take to protect the ocean, not in theory, but in practice?

For small countries like Belize, where the ocean supports more than half of our economy and livelihoods, the global target of protecting it is a national reality. But it comes with a challenge of will, financing, and partnership. At the 2025 UN Ocean Conference held in Nice, France, global leaders renewed their push for the 30×30 goal: conserving 30% of the ocean by 2030. Alongside it came pledges to reduce plastic pollution, restore degraded ecosystems, and close the ocean finance gap. The commitments were many. But how practical are these goals for small coastal nations like Belize? Belize is emerging as a global leader in marine conservation, protecting 25% of our ocean, banning offshore oil drilling, and leading mangrove and coral restoration efforts. We were also the first Caribbean country to ratify the BBNJ Agreement, the new international treaty for protecting marine biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction. We continue to champion our shared responsibility for the ocean. But sustaining those efforts requires more than ambitions. From Promises into Practice Since 2022, the Belize Fund for a Sustainable Future has served as the financial mechanism under the Belize Blue Bonds agreement, a historic debt-for-nature swap. In just three years, the Belize Fund has invested over BZ$25 million, supporting 14 marine protected areas, more than 200 jobs, and engaging 48 communities. We’ve funded coral restoration, fisheries enforcement, seaweed farming, research, and community education. But our ambition extends further. Guided by our 2025–2030 Priorities, we are focused on: True sustainable development is when conservation supports both the ecosystems and people that depend on healthy reefs. The Challenge Beneath the Surface The global stage is full of powerful language: ā€œThe ocean is life.ā€ ā€œNo one left behind.ā€ ā€œMobilize billions.ā€ But for small island developing states (SIDS), the resources are limited. Administrative burdens and heavy. And even well-meaning targets feel out of reach. At UNOC3, multiple countries called for simplified access to ocean finance. For developing countries, the biggest barriers to action aren’t ambitions. They are limited resources, complex systems, and the challenge of turning good plans into funded actions. ā€œThe Belize Fund was established to make sure conservation financing reaches the people that need it most through projects, and in ways that are responsive, inclusive and transparent,ā€ says Dr. Leandra Cho-Ricketts, Executive Director of the Belize Fund. ā€œOur grantmaking adapts to local realities while aligning with national and global priorities.ā€ Protecting 30% of the ocean only matters when it supports local communities, respects tradition and culture while promoting sustainable use of marine resources, and creates real opportunities. But it stops working when it’s forced without context or when it makes life harder for the very people who depend on the ocean to survive. Global goals must be grounded in the everyday realities of our people. That’s the work. Partnerships: The Pathway to Progress There is still so much more to do but Belize cannot do it alone. At UNOC3, there were strong calls for increased financing, deeper inclusion of local knowledge, and partnership-building, themes that align deeply with our approach. The Belize Fund exists not just to unlock investment, but also to pilot what’s possible. To bridge the gap between ambition and action. Between the global stage and communities like Chunox, Gales Point, and Barranco. Between targets and transformation. ā€œWe are aiming to raise BZ$23.5 million by 2030 to support impactful, science-based and community-led conservation,ā€ says Dr. Cho. Ricketts. ā€œIt’s a smart investment with the potential for outsized impact, not just for Belize but for coastal and marine resilience globally.ā€ So, can Belize deliver on 30×30 and more? Absolutely! But we must remember that real progress isn’t only about how much you protect. It’s also about how and who benefits. The ocean is vast. But change can start small. If we want global goals to be more than numbers, we need to fund the frontlines. We need to value the stewardship of small nations with big ocean ambition. And we need to walk the talk because we simply can’t afford not to.

ā€œBelize Fund for a Sustainable Future Request for Proposals graphic announcing External Audit Services for Fiscal Year Ending 2026, featuring a shark silhouette and deadline January 30, 2026.ā€
Opportunities

Request for Proposals – External Audit Services for Fiscal Year 2026

The Belize Fund invites qualified, independent audit firms to submit proposals to conduct an external audit of the Fund’s financial statements for the fiscal year April 1, 2025 – March 31, 2026, in accordance with U.S. GAAS and U.S. GAAP standards. This RFP seeks an audit partner that demonstrates technical excellence, independence, and a strong understanding of conservation or donor-funded financial management. The selected firm will deliver a detailed, high-quality audit report that provides insight and recommendations to enhance financial controls and transparency. Key Dates and Submission Details Proposals must include a technical and financial proposal, relevant certifications, and confirmation of independence as outlined in the RFP document. The selected audit firm will be engaged for a three-year period, subject to annual performance review. Read the complete Request for Proposals (RFP) for detailed scope, evaluation criteria, and submission requirements. šŸ”— Download the full RFP here:

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