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Madre de Dios Amazon REDD Project

Sustainable forest management helps protect endangered rainforest and the wildlife.

Category: Trees and farms • Country: Peru
 

Image: Community building

The community's members belong to the Yine indigenous tribe.
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Overview

What is it all about?

The Peruvian Amazon is in great danger of deforestation especially since the construction of the interoceanic road that goes through this area. Previously there was no adequate protection from illegal loggers. Therefore the aim of the project is to dramatically reduce deforestation by increasing surveillance in the rainforest.

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How does it work?

The project seeks to reduce the pressure on lands in the project area and its buffer zone and to guarantee the sustainable forest management in both timber concessions through the implementation of an avoided deforestation project that will help generate higher commercial resources for the management of the area. show all

Social benefits

The project will contribute to the sustainable development of rural producers and indigenous communities living in the nearby areas - such as the Yine tribe, indigenous people in voluntary isolation of the Mashco Piro tribe and other tribes that exist in the area but have not yet been identified. show all

Environmental benefits

Both concession areas are considered to be High Conservation Value Forests with extremely rich flora and fauna. show all

Key project data

  • Verification standard:
    CCBS Gold Level
  • Credits produced:
  • Planned annual reduction:
    900000 tCO2e

Endangered species of Madre de Dios

Common name Scientific name
Blue-throated piping-guan Pipile cumanensis
Giant anteater Myrmecophaga tridactyla
Giant Armadillo Priodontes maximus
Jaguar Panthera onca
Razor-billed Curassow Mitu tuberosum
Red-and-green Macaw Ara chloropterus
Red howler Monkey Alouatta seniculus
Sanborn's squirrel Sciurus sanborni
Scarlet Macaw Ara macao
South American Tapir Tapirus terrestris
Cedar Cedrela odorata
Leche caspi Galactodendron utilisima
Mahogany Swietenia macrophylla
Ojé Ficus insipida

Participants and Milestones

Participants

  • Developer: Greenoxx NGO
  • Validator: Scientific Certifications System
  • Registry: Markit Environmental Registry
  • Carbon Credits Owner: Maderacre, Maderyja and Greenoxx NGO
  • Technical support: AIDER NGO, WWF, ProNaturaleza and CESVI

Milestones

  • 30 May 2006 Project initiation:
  • 02 December 2009 Validation was complete:
  • 30 April 2010 Project was registered:
  • 31 May 2010 First sale of carbon credits:

Location data

Location

Address: Madre de Dios, Tahuamanu Province, Peru

About the region

Wildlife

The region belongs to the Vilcabamba-Amboró Conservation Corridor, that stretches from the Vilcabamba mountain range in northern Peru to the Amboró National Park in Bolivia. It protects 30 million hectares of tropical forest in the Andes region creating a natural passageway for jaguars, peccaries, macaws, and giant anteaters.

Interesting facts

Besides agriculture, the main economic activity in the region is gold mining, causing serious environmental and health problems. Most gold miners use liquid mercury to extract gold particles from the river silt, which - after being vaporized - contaminates the surrounding ecosystems.

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