The program is led by the
Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA), which coordinates the process of identifying protected areas, creating them by law, preparing management plans and establishing staff and infrastructure. IBAMA works with local government authorities and community members. Implementation is overseen by a steering committee that includes representatives from government agencies and civil society. The Brazilian government covers core staffing costs. The
World Bank oversees additional funding, which is managed by the Brazilian Biodiversity Fund (FUNBIO). Funding is provided by the
Global Environment Facility through the World Bank, the government of Germany through the
KfW German Development Bank, the
World Wide Fund for Nature through WWF-Brazil and the
Amazon Fund through the
Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES). Conservation units are eligible for disbursements from the fund only when they can show that they comply with rigorous standards. ==Operations==