Deadline: 24-Jul-2026
The Economic Development Grants program by the Global Climbing Initiative provides grants of up to USD 2,000 to support community-led climbing projects that promote sustainable economic growth. The program funds initiatives that create jobs, generate tourism, strengthen local businesses, and expand climbing-related economic opportunities outside the continental United States or within Indigenous communities in the United States.
Economic Development Grants Overview
The Economic Development Grants program supports locally led projects that use climbing as a catalyst for sustainable economic development. The initiative encourages communities to build long-term economic opportunities through climbing-related activities while promoting local leadership, entrepreneurship, and community ownership.
The program prioritizes projects that create measurable economic benefits, strengthen local climbing organizations, and contribute to resilient local economies.
Program Objectives
The Economic Development Grants program aims to:
- Create sustainable income opportunities through climbing.
- Generate local employment.
- Promote responsible climbing tourism.
- Support entrepreneurship and small business development.
- Strengthen local climbing organizations.
- Encourage workforce development.
- Build sustainable climbing economies.
- Align projects with local community priorities.
- Promote long-term economic resilience.
Funding Available
Applicants can receive:
- Grant Amount: Up to USD 2,000 per project.
- Project Duration: Six-month implementation period based on the current grant cycle.
The funding is intended for projects with clear economic outcomes that benefit local communities.
Eligible Projects
The program supports a variety of community-led climbing initiatives, including:
- Guide training and certification programs.
- Development of local climbing guide businesses.
- Community climbing festivals that generate local economic activity.
- Workforce development and skills training.
- Climbing instructor training.
- Social enterprises connected to climbing.
- Sustainable climbing tourism initiatives.
- Projects that create employment opportunities.
- Community businesses linked to indoor or outdoor climbing.
Projects should demonstrate how climbing will contribute to sustainable local economic growth.
Who Is Eligible?
Eligible applicants include:
- Local climbing organizations with demonstrated climbing-related impact.
- Local leaders representing eligible climbing organizations.
Eligible projects must:
- Be related to indoor or outdoor climbing.
- Be community-led.
- Demonstrate measurable economic benefits.
- Support sustainable local development.
- Be located outside the continental United States, or
- Be led by an Indigenous community within the United States.
Who Is Not Eligible?
Projects may not qualify if they:
- Are unrelated to climbing.
- Lack community leadership.
- Do not demonstrate economic impact.
- Are proposed by organizations without established climbing-related experience.
- Are located within the continental United States unless led by an Indigenous community.
Why This Grant Matters
Many climbing communities possess strong tourism and employment potential but lack financial resources to develop sustainable economic opportunities.
The Economic Development Grants program helps communities:
- Create new local businesses.
- Increase employment opportunities.
- Expand sustainable tourism.
- Support local entrepreneurs.
- Build stronger climbing organizations.
- Generate long-term community income.
- Encourage local ownership and leadership.
By investing in community-driven initiatives, the program ensures that climbing contributes to lasting economic development.
How the Grant Works
The program supports projects that use climbing as a tool for economic development.
Successful projects typically:
- Identify an economic opportunity within the local climbing community.
- Develop a community-led solution.
- Create measurable employment or income opportunities.
- Strengthen local organizations or businesses.
- Deliver activities within the six-month implementation period.
- Demonstrate sustainable long-term impact.
How to Apply
Applicants should follow these steps:
Step 1: Confirm Eligibility
Ensure that:
- Your organization is locally based.
- Your project relates to climbing.
- Your organization has demonstrated climbing-related impact.
- The project location meets eligibility requirements.
Step 2: Design Your Project
Develop a project that:
- Creates measurable economic benefits.
- Supports local employment or business development.
- Promotes sustainable climbing tourism or entrepreneurship.
- Benefits the wider community.
Step 3: Prepare Your Proposal
Include:
- Project objectives.
- Community need.
- Planned activities.
- Expected economic outcomes.
- Implementation timeline.
- Budget.
- Organizational experience.
Step 4: Submit the Application
Complete the application according to the grant guidelines before the submission deadline.
Selection Criteria
Applications are expected to be evaluated based on:
- Community leadership.
- Economic impact.
- Sustainability.
- Local ownership.
- Feasibility.
- Alignment with climbing-related economic development.
- Long-term community benefit.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Submitting projects unrelated to climbing.
- Failing to demonstrate measurable economic outcomes.
- Proposing activities without community leadership.
- Providing unclear budgets or implementation plans.
- Focusing only on recreation instead of economic development.
- Ignoring long-term sustainability.
Tips for a Strong Application
- Demonstrate strong community involvement.
- Clearly explain how jobs or income will be created.
- Include measurable economic indicators.
- Show how the project strengthens local organizations.
- Present a realistic implementation timeline.
- Highlight long-term sustainability beyond the grant period.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. What is the maximum grant amount?
Applicants can receive up to USD 2,000 per project.
2. Who can apply?
Eligible local climbing organizations represented by local leaders with demonstrated climbing-related impact.
3. What types of projects are funded?
Projects involving guide training, climbing businesses, workforce development, instructor training, social enterprises, community festivals, and sustainable climbing tourism.
4. How long can projects run?
Each approved project has a six-month implementation period.
5. Where must projects be located?
Projects must be located outside the continental United States or be led by Indigenous communities within the United States.
6. Can indoor climbing projects apply?
Yes. Both indoor and outdoor climbing projects are eligible.
7. What is the main goal of the program?
The program aims to create sustainable economic opportunities through climbing by supporting employment, entrepreneurship, tourism, and community-led economic development.
Conclusion
The Economic Development Grants program offers valuable funding for community-led climbing initiatives that generate sustainable economic opportunities. With grants of up to USD 2,000, the program supports projects that strengthen local businesses, create employment, promote responsible tourism, and build resilient climbing communities through locally driven economic development.
For more information, visit The Global Climbing Initiative.


























