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NOAA Proposes $45 Million for Coastal Habitat Restoration and Resilience Projects for Tribes and Underserved Communities as Part of Biden-Harris Administration’s Investing in America Agenda

Posted on August 26, 2024

Today, NOAA is recommending more than $45 million in funding to support 27 new Coastal Habitat Restoration and Resilience Grants for Tribes and Underserved Communities. Of this $45 million in funding, more than $20 million is recommended for federally recognized tribes and tribal organizations. Another $25 million is recommended for projects that will benefit underserved communities. These funds from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and Inflation Reduction Act will advance tribes’ and underserved communities’ coastal habitat restoration and climate resilience priorities.

“This $45 million investment, part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s Investing in America agenda, will empower tribes and underserved communities on the front lines of the climate crisis to restore ecologically and culturally important coastal ecosystems and boost their resilience to climate change,” said U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo.

NOAA recommends that $20 million of this funding go to federally recognized tribes and tribal organizations who will play key roles in decision-making about habitat restoration projects, build their capacity to advance habitat restoration and climate resilience efforts and realize community and economic benefits such as jobs and training opportunities.

This funding supports President Biden’s America the Beautiful Initiative, a locally led and voluntary nation-wide effort to conserve, connect and restore at least 30 percent of America’s lands and waters by 2030. This funding also advances the President’s Justice40 Initiative, which sets a goal that 40 percent of the overall benefits of certain federal clean energy, climate, and other investments flow to disadvantaged communities that are marginalized by underinvestment and overburdened by pollution.

“Building Capacity” Is Key to Climate Resilience

Building the capacity of local communities helps achieve a key objective of the National Climate Resilience Framework: To “equip communities with information and resources needed to assess their climate risks and develop the climate resilience solutions most appropriate for them.”

Capacity building can encompass a number of activities, such as hiring project managers, facilitating community participation, creating foundational plans to guide restoration and developing workforce training. This work prepares communities, including decision makers, to adapt to a changing climate. For instance, several projects funded by these awards will help build capacity for Indigenous communities to maintain and transfer their Indigenous knowledge. Others will support on-the-ground restoration that can help communities address issues such as poor water quality, flooding and lack of access to green space. Some will involve building nature-based infrastructure to protect communities from threats such as erosion and sea level rise.

“These projects demonstrate the power of community-driven habitat restoration,” said Janet Coit, assistant administrator for NOAA Fisheries. “Building the capacity of tribes and underserved communities will help ensure that their needs and priorities are at the center of this work happening in their communities.”

About NOAA’s Office of Habitat Conservation

NOAA’s Office of Habitat Conservation has a long history of conducting habitat restoration by executing large-scale competitive funding opportunities and providing expert technical assistance through the Community-based Restoration Program. The program provides technical and financial assistance to partners across the country to develop high-quality habitat restoration projects that support our nation’s fisheries. Since its start in 1996, the program has helped implement more than 2,200 coastal habitat restoration projects — restoring more than 94,000 acres of habitat for fish and opening more than 4,400 stream miles for fish passage.

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