Profonanpe News

17/01/2025

Peru to promote conservation in Madre de Dios with integrated sustainable management Project

In the quest to conserve one of the most biodiverse ecosystems on the planet, the Global Environment Facility (GEF) has approved the project “Promoting the Sustainable Integrated Management of the Peruvian Amazonian Landscape of Madre de Dios”, to be implemented by the Ministry of Environment and Profonanpe.

Photo: WWF / Minam

 

This initiative is part of the third phase of the Amazon Sustainable Landscapes (ASL) Program, which aims to address key challenges such as deforestation, biodiversity loss and climate change.

 

The project, which covers an intervention area of more than 4.7 million hectares in Madre de Dios, prioritizes the protection of five Natural Protected Areas (NPAs), including Alto Purús National Park, Amarakaeri Communal Reserve, Tambopata National Reserve, Manu National Park, Bahuaja Sonene National Park, and their buffer zones.  It also seeks to strengthen ecological connectivity and mitigate carbon emissions in this region known as the “Biodiversity Capital of Peru”.

 

Key project strategies

The project will generate a transformational impact through an integrated landscape management approach. To this end, it adopts a collaborative, multi-sector, multi-level model based on four interconnected strategies:

 

  • Development and strengthening of enabling policy conditions, governance, and institutional capacities for territorial planning, and monitoring and control of deforestation.
  • The promotion of sustainable production practices in key habitats of standing forests and buffer zones of Natural Protected Areas, and bio-businesses such as ecotourism, agroforestry, fish farming and palm fruits, as an alternative for sustainable development in the landscape, and to facilitate adaptation to climate change by local communities and indigenous peoples.
  • The implementation of actions for the conservation of biodiversity and biological connectivity and the restoration of key ecosystems, contributing to carbon sequestration and the development of ecosystem resilience, and helping to mitigate the impacts of climate change in Madre de Dios.
  • Knowledge management, promoting the generation of strategic information for decision making and collaboration between local and national stakeholders.

 

A model of sustainability and participation

The landscape includes a robust network of Protected Natural Areas (PNAs), indigenous territories and forest resource-based economies, and is noted for possessing one of the largest intact and connected tropical forest biomes in the Peruvian Amazon, offering an exceptional opportunity for long-term conservation of its global environmental values.

 

The project formulation and validation process were developed in a participatory manner between August 2023 and December 2024, with the involvement of the various landscape stakeholders, considering gender, intercultural and intergenerational approaches.  The project also has an Environmental and Social Management Framework, a Gender Plan, a Safety Protocol, and a Stakeholder Involvement Plan.

 

Learn more about these documents: STAKEHOLDER INVOLVEMENT PLAN and the ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK (ESMF).

 

With a five-year implementation horizon, this initiative is projected as a transformative model for conservation and development in the Peruvian Amazon.

Comunicaciones Profonanpe

Comunicaciones Profonanpe

You may be interesed

05/10/2025

Over 100 Varieties of Native Potatoes Shine at High-Andean Conservation Festival

04/10/2025

Conserva Aves Bolsters Conservation in Peru with Six New Winning Projects

04/10/2025

Second Call for Puna Fund: High-Andean Communities Can Access Up to S/ 480,000 in Funding

03/10/2025

Huata Solidifies Its Commitment to Conservation: Community and Biodiversity in Action

02/10/2025

Seven Key Territories Prepare to Protect Their Biodiversity

01/10/2025

Amazonian Bio businesses to Receive Up to USD 150,000 to Consolidate Interventions and Scale Impact on Climate Change Mitigation