The Global Climbing Initiative (GCI) is now accepting applications for its Fall 2026 Economic Development Grants, providing funding of up to $2,000 USD for locally led climbing projects that generate jobs, strengthen local businesses, expand sustainable tourism, and improve economic opportunities within climbing communities.
These grants are designed to empower local climbing organizations to build stronger, more resilient local economies through community-driven initiatives. Rather than funding short-term activities, the Global Climbing Initiative focuses on projects that create lasting economic benefits while ensuring that local communities remain at the center of decision-making.
If your organization is using climbing as a tool for economic development, entrepreneurship, workforce development, or tourism, this funding opportunity could help turn your vision into reality.
About the Global Climbing Initiative Economic Development Grants
The Global Climbing Initiative believes that climbing has the potential to transform communities economically when local organizations lead development efforts.
The Economic Development Grants support projects that:
- Create sustainable employment opportunities.
- Generate income for local communities.
- Support entrepreneurship.
- Strengthen climbing-related businesses.
- Expand responsible climbing tourism.
- Increase long-term economic resilience.
The emphasis is on local ownership, community priorities, and long-term sustainability, ensuring projects continue creating value well beyond the grant period.
What Are Economic Development Projects?
Economic development projects are initiatives that use climbing as a platform to improve livelihoods and stimulate local economies.
Rather than simply promoting climbing as a sport, these projects focus on creating sustainable opportunities that directly benefit climbers and surrounding communities.
Successful projects typically:
- Build sustainable climbing economies.
- Strengthen local climbing organizations.
- Support employment within the climbing sector.
- Expand tourism opportunities.
- Encourage entrepreneurship.
- Improve workforce skills.
- Deliver measurable economic impact.
What the Grant Supports
The Global Climbing Initiative funds locally led projects with clearly defined and measurable economic outcomes.
Examples of eligible projects include:
- Guide training and certification.
- Development of local climbing guide businesses.
- Community climbing festivals that stimulate local economic activity.
- Workforce development initiatives.
- Climbing instructor training.
- Climbing-related social enterprises.
- Projects that promote sustainable climbing tourism.
- Other innovative climbing-related economic development initiatives.
Projects should clearly demonstrate how they will improve economic opportunities for the local climbing community.
Grant Benefits
Successful applicants will receive:
- Funding of up to $2,000 USD.
- Support for projects lasting six months.
- Recognition as a Global Climbing Initiative grant partner.
- Opportunity to strengthen local climbing organizations.
- Opportunity to create sustainable jobs and businesses.
- Increased visibility within the international climbing community.
Eligibility Criteria
Projects must meet all of the following requirements:
- Be directly related to climbing (indoor or outdoor).
- Be led by a local climbing organization.
- Be proposed by a local leader within that organization.
- Demonstrate previous climbing-related impact.
- Be located outside the continental United States, or be led by an Indigenous community within the United States.
- Meet compliance and risk requirements established by the Global Climbing Initiative.
Previous Grant Recipients
Organizations that previously received funding:
- Cannot receive funding in the same grant category during consecutive grant cycles.
- May apply in another grant category.
- May reapply after sitting out one grant cycle.
- Will be evaluated equally alongside all other applicants.
Grant Amount
Successful organizations may receive:
Project Duration
Approved projects will run for:
- October 1, 2026 – March 31, 2027
How Applications Are Evaluated
Since funding is competitive, proposals are assessed based on several important factors.
Reviewers will prioritize projects that demonstrate:
- Strong alignment with Economic Development Grant objectives.
- Local leadership and community ownership.
- Clearly defined economic goals.
- Measurable outcomes.
- Genuine community need.
- Organizational capacity to implement the project.
- Long-term sustainability beyond grant funding.
- A realistic and well-structured budget.
- Alignment with the values of the Global Climbing Initiative.
Funding Guidelines
Budgets should:
- Be realistic.
- Include detailed cost breakdowns.
- Directly support project implementation.
- Focus primarily on project activities.
Projects emphasizing direct community impact are significantly more competitive.
What the Grant Will Not Fund
Funding cannot be used for:
- Projects located in the continental United States (unless led by Indigenous communities).
- Projects not connected to climbing.
- Projects lacking local leadership.
- Projects that do not focus on sustainable economic development.
- Academic research.
- Conferences.
- White papers.
- Social media campaigns.
- Public awareness campaigns.
- Political campaigns.
- Advocacy initiatives.
- Land acquisition.
- Easements.
- Endowments.
- Salaries.
- Staff stipends.
- General operating expenses.
- Promotional merchandise.
- T-shirts.
- Participant swag.
- Projects without a clear implementation plan or timeline.
Additional Restrictions
Applicants should also note that:
- Budgets should not primarily compensate project team members.
- Organizations seeking climbing equipment should instead apply through the Gear Distribution Program.
- Essential equipment purchases are allowed if they support project implementation.
- Revenue-generating activities should primarily benefit the broader climbing community rather than individual leaders.
- Skills training and certification programs should be offered free of charge or at reduced cost whenever possible.
Grant Recipient Responsibilities
Successful grant partners must:
- Attend a grant finalist meeting.
- Sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).
- Sign the Global Climbing Initiative Code of Conduct.
- Sign a photography agreement.
- Acknowledge the Global Climbing Initiative as a supporter or sponsor in public communications related to the project.
Within 60 days after project completion, recipients must submit:
- A 1–2 page project summary.
- A folder containing quality project photographs.
- Qualitative and quantitative impact metrics.
- Quotes and testimonials from the project team.
Fall 2026 Grant Timeline
Applicants should carefully follow the official timeline:
- July 6–24, 2026: Initial application period.
- July 14, 2026: Informational webinars.
- August 3, 2026: Initial application notifications.
- August 3–28, 2026: Invitation-only project proposal stage.
- September 15, 2026: Finalist notifications.
- September 21–28, 2026: Finalist meetings.
- September 29, 2026: Final funding decisions.
- October 1, 2026 – March 31, 2027: Project implementation period.
- Within 60 days after project completion: Final reports and supporting documents due.
Previously Funded Projects
The Global Climbing Initiative has previously supported projects in several countries, including:
- Peru – Trail building, route development, and community festivals.
- Chile – Women’s climbing instructor and wilderness medicine training.
- Nepal – Advanced climbing guide training for women.
- Colombia – Routesetting education for women and nonbinary climbers.
- Guatemala – Climbing development for ecotourism.
These examples demonstrate the Initiative’s commitment to supporting diverse community-led projects that generate lasting economic benefits.
How to Apply
Interested organizations should first review the official application guide before submitting their initial application.
Applicants can also participate in the informational webinar scheduled for July 14, 2026, to better understand the grant requirements and application process.
Application Deadline: July 24, 2026
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