International Development Grant
Canadian International Resources and Development Institute (CIRDI)
Project Number: CA-3-S065811001
Status: Closed
Country/Region: Unknown
Regional Focus:
Maximum Contribution: $22,469,088.00
Start Date: June 24, 2013
End Date: July 31, 2019
Duration: 6.1 years
Project Description
This project seeks to set up the Canadian International Resources and Development Institute (CIRDI). Established in 2013 CIRDI is a coalition of the University of British Columbia Simon Fraser University and École Polytechnique de Montréal. The Institute’s mandate is to assist developing countries to improve and strengthen their natural resource governance through policy legislation regulatory development and implementation training technical assistance and applied research. CIRDI’s main activities include: (1) conducting country-level needs assessments (e.g. in the areas of taxation legislation revenue collection and distribution); (2) delivering technical assistance to respond to these needs (for example by improving national legislation and regulatory policies); (3) supporting the training of government officials and practitioners (for example: scholarships accreditation and certification programs); and (4) sharing Canadian knowledge and expertise broadly through publicly accessible media and relationships with other world-renowned centres. Examples of projects include integrated water resource management in Peru transforming artisanal and small-scale mining in Ecuador and Colombia building capacity in the Ministry of Mines in Ethiopia and smaller projects looking at local procurement strategies in Africa and the rise in mining conflicts internationally.
Expected Results
The expected intermediate outcomes for this project include: (1) improved design and implementation of extractive sector policies and frameworks by developing country governments; (2) increased human resource capacity in developing countries to contribute to the equitable and sustainable governance and management of their extractive sectors; and (3) increased generation and sharing of knowledge on extractive sector governance and management in developing countries.
Progress & Results Achieved
Results achieved as of March 2018 include: (1) 2 517 people (1 053 women 1 259 men 205 undisclosed) were trained globally by CIRDI in leading practice and innovation for the gender-responsive and environmentally sustainable utilization of extractive sector resources demonstrating the sustainability of CIRDI as a new institute; (2) 4 extractive sector policies and regulatory frameworks that integrate environmental sustainability leading practices and gender equality were produced. These results reflect work completed in Argentina Papua New Guinea Senegal and West Africa (through the West African Economic and Monetary Union UEMOA); (3) 3 new Master’s Programs were developed and launched that are gender-responsive and include environmental sustainability leading practices in Burkina Faso Peru and Senegal; (4) 96 decision-makers (22 women 42 men 32 undisclosed) participated in the analysis and application of global leading practices for extractive sector policies regulatory frameworks and natural resource management plans that integrate environmental sustainability and/or affect employment and local content and health and safety. Results include decision-makers from Argentina Burkina Faso Colombia Ecuador Ghana Indonesia Mongolia Peru Senegal Tanzania and Senegal. These results contributed to improving the ability of developing countries to utilize and benefit from their extractive sectors in order to stimulate sustainable economic growth and reduce poverty.
Key Information
Executing Agency:
University of British Columbia
Reporting Organization:
Global Affairs Canada
Program:
YFMInternaAssistPartnershp&Programing Br
Last Modified:
September 19, 2025
Development Classifications
DAC Sector:
Aid Type: Project-type interventions
Collaboration: Bilateral
Finance Type: Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation
Selection Mechanism:
Pre-APP