Deadline: 03-Jul-2026
The High Commission of Canada in South Africa has launched the Canada Fund for Local Initiatives 2026 call for proposals to support small-scale, high-impact projects in Mauritius. Selected projects are expected to begin implementation in Fall 2026.
The average CFLI contribution in Mauritius ranges from CAD 20,000 to CAD 50,000, with a maximum allocation of CAD 100,000 per eligible project. The call supports locally driven projects focused on inclusive growth, governance, peace and security, gender equality, human dignity, and environment and climate action.
What is the Canada Fund for Local Initiatives?
The Canada Fund for Local Initiatives is a Global Affairs Canada programme that supports small-scale, high-impact projects in developing countries.
The programme focuses on projects designed and implemented by local partners.
In Mauritius, the 2026 CFLI call supports community-level initiatives that contribute to sustainable development and strengthen engagement between Canada, Mauritius, and local civil society organisations.
Main Purpose of the CFLI Call in Mauritius
The main purpose of the call is to support locally driven projects that respond to priority development challenges in Mauritius.
The programme aims to:
- Support local development initiatives
- Strengthen civil society engagement
- Promote sustainable development
- Encourage innovative community-level solutions
- Build partnerships between Canada and Mauritius
- Support projects that deliver measurable results
- Advance Global Affairs Canada’s thematic priorities
Geographic Focus
This call supports projects implemented in Mauritius.
Projects should be locally relevant and designed to address the needs of communities in Mauritius.
Project Start
Selected projects are expected to begin implementation in Fall 2026.
Applicants should ensure that proposed activities and expenses fall within the approved project period.
Thematic Priorities
Projects must align with one or more CFLI thematic priorities.
Thematic priorities include:
- Growth that works for everyone
- Inclusive governance
- Peace and security
- Gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls in all their diversity
- Human dignity
- Environment and climate action
Funding Amount
The average CFLI contribution in Mauritius ranges from CAD 20,000 to CAD 50,000.
The maximum allocation is CAD 100,000 per eligible project.
Applicants should prepare realistic budgets that match the project’s scope, activities, and expected results.
Who is Eligible?
The programme primarily supports local organisations and institutions working at the community level.
Eligible recipients may include:
- Local non-governmental organisations
- Community organisations
- Local not-for-profit organisations
- Eligible academic institutions
- International organisations working with local partners
- Intergovernmental organisations
- Municipal government institutions involved in local projects
- Regional government institutions involved in local projects
- National government institutions involved in local projects
What Types of Projects Are Supported?
The CFLI supports projects that are locally designed, innovative, and results-oriented.
Supported projects may include initiatives related to:
- Inclusive economic growth
- Civic participation
- Accountable governance
- Peacebuilding
- Conflict prevention
- Women’s and girls’ empowerment
- Human rights
- Human dignity
- Environmental protection
- Climate action
- Community resilience
- Local capacity-building
Key Concepts Explained
Small-Scale Project
A small-scale project is a focused initiative with clear objectives, defined activities, specific beneficiaries, and a realistic budget.
High-Impact Project
A high-impact project delivers meaningful and measurable benefits for communities, even with a modest funding amount.
Locally Driven Solution
A locally driven solution is designed and implemented by local partners based on local needs, priorities, and community realities.
Inclusive Governance
Inclusive governance supports participation, transparency, accountability, and access to decision-making for different groups in society.
Human Dignity
Human dignity refers to rights, equality, protection, wellbeing, and access to opportunities that allow people to live safely and with respect.
Eligible Project Costs
Eligible costs must be directly connected to project implementation.
Eligible expenses may include:
- Project-related administrative and overhead costs
- Infrastructure-related expenses
- Equipment
- Communication costs
- Project salaries
- Training and capacity-building
- Events
- Research activities
- Outreach activities
- Travel expenses
- Security costs
- Translation services
- Website development
- Other direct project implementation expenses
Ineligible Project Costs
CFLI funding cannot be used for certain costs and activities.
Ineligible costs include:
- Vehicle purchases
- Nuclear technologies
- Assistance to military organisations
- Assistance to paramilitary organisations
- Gifts
- Luxury goods
- Direct fiscal support to governments
- Core organisational funding
- Revolving funds
- Expenses outside the approved project period
Applicants should ensure that all proposed costs are eligible and clearly linked to the approved project activities.
How the Programme Works
The CFLI provides project-based funding to eligible organisations for locally developed development initiatives.
Applicants submit proposals aligned with one or more thematic priorities.
Projects are reviewed based on relevance, innovation, feasibility, local ownership, and measurable results.
Selected organisations implement approved activities according to the agreed project plan, budget, and contribution agreement.
How to Apply
Applicants should prepare a clear proposal that explains the project need, objectives, activities, beneficiaries, budget, and expected results.
Suggested Application Steps
- Confirm that the applicant is an eligible organisation.
- Identify the local issue the project will address in Mauritius.
- Select the CFLI thematic priority most relevant to the project.
- Define clear project objectives and expected outcomes.
- Identify target beneficiaries and local partners.
- Prepare a practical activity plan.
- Develop a realistic budget within the eligible funding range.
- Ensure all costs are eligible and directly linked to implementation.
- Explain how the project is locally driven.
- Show how the project will deliver measurable results.
- Demonstrate organisational capacity to implement the project.
- Submit the proposal according to the official CFLI call instructions.
Expected Results
Selected projects should produce clear and measurable community benefits.
Expected results may include:
- Stronger local civil society engagement
- Improved participation in governance
- Increased support for women and girls
- Greater protection of human dignity
- Stronger peace and security outcomes
- Improved environmental or climate resilience
- Increased local capacity
- Better outreach to vulnerable or underserved groups
- Practical solutions to local development challenges
Why It Matters
The CFLI helps local organisations implement practical projects that respond directly to community needs.
In Mauritius, the 2026 call supports initiatives that advance inclusive growth, governance, peace, gender equality, human dignity, and climate action.
Because the programme prioritises locally driven solutions, it helps ensure that supported activities are grounded in local realities and led by organisations with community knowledge.
It also strengthens engagement between Canada, Mauritius, and civil society organisations working for sustainable development.
Tips for Strong Applications
A strong application should clearly show how the project will deliver measurable and locally relevant impact.
Applicants should focus on:
- Clear alignment with CFLI thematic priorities
- Strong local ownership
- Innovative and practical project design
- Specific target beneficiaries
- Realistic budget and timeline
- Eligible and well-justified costs
- Strong partnership approach
- Clear implementation plan
- Measurable outcomes
- Organisational capacity to deliver the project
Applicants should avoid broad proposals and instead present focused activities that directly respond to a local development need.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Applicants should carefully review eligibility, cost rules, and thematic priorities before submission.
Common mistakes include:
- Proposing activities outside CFLI priorities
- Submitting a project without clear local relevance
- Including ineligible costs such as vehicle purchases or core funding
- Requesting more than the maximum allocation
- Failing to explain measurable results
- Providing vague activity descriptions
- Not identifying beneficiaries clearly
- Including expenses outside the approved project period
- Not demonstrating implementation capacity
- Providing an unclear or unrealistic budget
FAQ
What is the Canada Fund for Local Initiatives?
The Canada Fund for Local Initiatives is a Global Affairs Canada programme that supports small-scale, high-impact projects designed and implemented by local partners in developing countries.
What is the focus of the CFLI 2026 call in Mauritius?
The call supports projects related to inclusive growth, inclusive governance, peace and security, gender equality, human dignity, and environment and climate action.
How much funding is available per project?
The average contribution ranges from CAD 20,000 to CAD 50,000, with a maximum of CAD 100,000 per eligible project.
When will selected projects begin?
Selected projects are expected to begin implementation in Fall 2026.
Who can apply?
Eligible recipients include local NGOs, community organisations, not-for-profit organisations, academic institutions, international organisations working with local partners, intergovernmental organisations, and government institutions involved in local projects.
What costs are eligible?
Eligible costs may include project administration, infrastructure-related expenses, equipment, communication costs, salaries, training, events, research, outreach, travel, security, translation services, website development, and other implementation costs.
What costs are not eligible?
Ineligible costs include vehicle purchases, nuclear technologies, military or paramilitary assistance, gifts, luxury goods, direct fiscal support to governments, core organisational funding, revolving funds, and expenses outside the approved project period.
Conclusion
The Canada Fund for Local Initiatives 2026 call in Mauritius provides funding for locally driven, small-scale projects that deliver practical community impact. With average contributions ranging from CAD 20,000 to CAD 50,000 and a maximum of CAD 100,000, the programme supports initiatives aligned with Canada’s priorities in inclusive growth, governance, peace, gender equality, human dignity, and climate action.
Strong proposals will be locally designed, clearly aligned with CFLI priorities, realistic in scope and budget, and focused on measurable benefits for communities in Mauritius.
For more information, visit Government of Canada.









































