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Maliasili Conservation Fund (MCF) is a grant from Maliasili that provides multi-year, unrestricted core funding to Africa's leading locally-led conservation organizations. The fund invests in community-based organizations working on climate, wildlife conservation, local resource rights, and livelihoods in East Africa (Southern Kenya/Northern Tanzania rangelands), Madagascar, and the KAZA transfrontier region in southern Africa.
MCF aims to cover 10–25% of each grantee's annual budget during the funding period. The fund targets a $16M raise to support at least 26 organizations; $12. 3M has been raised to date.
Eligible organizations must be community-led conservation groups in Maliasili's three focal geographies, addressing the systemic funding gap that leaves African organizations receiving only ~10% of private philanthropic investment on the continent.
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Maliasili Conservation Fund | Maliasili Maliasili Conservation Fund More good money for great and impactful organizations → The Maliasili Conservation Fund (MCF) is a groundbreaking pooled funding initiative launched to provide multi-year, unrestricted support to a portfolio of Africa’s leading conservation organizations.
Inspired by the Maasai Landscape Conservation Fund (MLCF - 2020–2023), the MCF goes further, focusing on advancing innovative, locally-led conservation efforts in East Africa (EA), the KAZA region in southern Africa, and Madagascar.
MCF invests in community-led organization as they address climate, wildlife conservation, local resource rights, and livelihoods, helping to spread innovative and high-impact models, with local roots and leadership at the helm of the African conservation narrative. With the MCF, we aim to ensure that the best and brightest local organizations have the resources they need to strengthen their operations and amplify their impact.
Download our latest MCF impact report. Despite the talent, commitment, and impact of local organizations, the global funding architecture has made it exceedingly difficult for local organizations to increase their impact and set the agenda for the African community conservation space. Globally, Indigenous Peoples and local community organizations receive less than 1% of all climate funding.
African organizations receive only around 10% of all private philanthropic funding invested across the continent. Executive Director, Community Forest Conservation Network of Tanzania (MJUMITA) Many local conservation organizations are constrained by project-based funding that limits their ability to innovate or address emerging challenges.
The MCF aims at changing that narrative by offering: Empowering partners to align funding with their strategic priorities. Enabling long-term planning and sustainability. Minimizing administrative burdens so partners can focus on their work.
→ Relatively substantial funding The MCF aims to cover 10% - 25% of a grantee organization’s annual budget during the funding period, with a determined cap. MCF investments tackle critical challenges at the intersection of: Our funding helps scale locally-rooted solutions, advance leadership, and strengthen the African conservation narrative.
Highlights since we launched in 2023 → Disbursed as grants to date Partners in three focal geographies “You feel almost for the first time, that you're trusted as an entity that has been given money to use for conservation work. The way Maliasili staff approach you is as if they're the ones that owe you something that they need to negotiate with you.
” “Just so you know, this time of year, at the end of the 1st quarter, is always our most strained financial time for many varying reasons. And so this massive windfall of funding support has relieved the pressure significantly and for this we are extremely grateful to you all.
” “The clarity of the guidelines and the streamlined approach to grant application management were particularly beneficial, allowing us to reduce administrative burdens and focus our efforts on the effective implementation of our initiatives. ” Download our 2025 impact report So far, we have raised $12. 3M of a revised four-year funding target of $16M from a dedicated group of funding partners.
This includes $4M allocated by Maliasili from a 2022 one-time gift from MacKenzie Scott. Southern Kenya / Northern Tanzania Rangelands • East Africa's greatest savannah landscapes • National-level momentum for community conservation • Strong and established local and community-based organizations • Top global biodiversity hotspot • Urgent threats from deforestation and critically endangered species loss.
• New and rising Malagasy conservation leaders Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA) • A transboundary collaboration between Namibia. Angola. Zambia, Botswana, and Zimbabwe • Home to roughly half of all Africa's elephants.
• Strong community conservation leadership and existing working models We started this fund to fill a gap for our partners - to get them more and better money. But we also want it to help us and others in our field learn how we can improve funding and grantmaking mechanisms that will result in greater impact overall. Frequently Asked Questions → What is the Maliasili Conservation Fund?
The Maliasili Conservation Fund (MCF) is a fund that invests directly in the growth and impact of a portfolio of Africa’s leading community conservation organizations. These organizations have the ideas, commitment, grassroots presence, and community relationships to achieve critical outcomes for people, climate, and nature. How much funding does the Maliasili Conservation Fund aim to raise and distribute?
The Fund aims to raise $16M to distribute to at least 26 organizations in three key geographies. So far, we have raised $12M from a variety of generous funders and have distributed over $4M of flexible funding, directly supporting 26 organizations across three geographies. Why was the Maliasili Conservation Fund created?
The Fund was created to address the funding challenges that many local organizations across Africa face. Despite their talent and commitment, these organizations struggle to grow, increase their impact, and have their voices heard due to systemic barriers in funding practices.
Globally, Indigenous Peoples and local community organizations receive less than 1% of all climate funding, and African organizations receive only around 10% of all private philanthropic funding invested across the continent. The Maliasili Conservation Fund aims to change this by providing more equitable and effective funding. What types of support does the Fund provide?
The Fund provides direct, multi-year core support, including organizational development tools and processes, core funding, and customized organizational support. This enables grantees to invest in their teams, improve communication and fundraising, manage systems, and invest in infrastructure. What areas does the Fund focus on?
The Fund focuses on core operational support to local African organizations that are partners of Maliasili working in climate, wildlife conservation, local resource rights, and livelihoods. Why should I invest in the Maliasili Conservation Fund? Investing in the Fund allows you to support a portfolio of Africa’s best and brightest community conservation organizations.
Your investment helps address climate change, wildlife conservation, local resource rights, and livelihoods, promoting innovative and high-impact models with local roots and leadership. How can I get involved with the Maliasili Conservation Fund? Prospective donors can get involved by contributing to the Fund, participating in field learning opportunities, and engaging in strategy development processes.
Contact Maliasili to learn more about how you can support Africa’s leading community conservation organizations.
Driven by our partners success Organizational Development Building stronger organisations Developing conservation leaders Maliasili Conservation Fund Driving impact through better funding Offering services beyond our core partners Maliasili exists to help talented local conservation organizations overcome their challenges and constraints so that they can become more effective agents of change in their landscapes, communities, and nations.
4 Carmichael St, Suite 111-193, Essex Junction, VT 05452 Maliasili is designated as a public charity (501c3) organization by the Internal Revenue Service.
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Community-led organizations in East Africa (Southern Kenya/Northern Tanzania), Madagascar, and the KAZA region (Southern Africa) working on climate, wildlife conservation, local resource rights, and livelihoods. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates 10-25% of grantee's annual budget Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
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