Scheduled for official expansion in 2026, Belize’s Sustainable and Inclusive Belize (SAIB) Project, a grant initiative backed by the Inter-American Development Bank, is set to extend critical financial support to hundreds of additional small-scale farmers across the Central American nation after delivering promising early results from its first round of funding.
When the program launched its initial application round, project organizers carried out nationwide outreach to connect with eligible growers, offering multiple accessible pathways to apply: a dedicated online application portal and a telephone help line for farmers requiring assistance with the submission process. A specialized evaluation committee then reviewed all submissions to select candidates that met the program’s strict eligibility criteria, after which selected recipients completed mandatory training before receiving funding.
In its first cohort, the initiative successfully disbursed small grants to 666 individual small-scale farmers across Belize. Each participating grower can receive up to $4,000 USD, allocated to investments that boost agricultural output, strengthen climate resilience, and build long-term sustainable livelihoods. To date, participating farmers have directed their grant funding toward high-impact climate-smart upgrades, including new irrigation infrastructure, solar-powered water pumps, rainwater catchment systems, and climate-resistant hybrid seed varieties that can withstand shifting weather patterns linked to global climate change.
Following the successful rollout of the first round of individual farmer grants, the SAIB Project will now open a new application round that expands eligibility beyond independent small-scale growers. Agricultural micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and organized farmer associations will also be able to apply for funding to scale up their own sustainable production initiatives.
In addition to its agricultural support programming, the SAIB Project, which is fully financed by the Inter-American Development Bank, also allocates grant funding to small and medium-sized tourism-related businesses across Belize to support inclusive economic growth across multiple key sectors of the nation’s economy. The program’s expansion comes as small-scale producers across Central America face growing pressure from climate change, making targeted financial support for climate-smart agriculture a critical policy priority for long-term food security and rural economic stability.
