Our Territory: Amazon Nature Climate Solutions

Wildfires may grab headlines but indigenous peoples and local communities who depend the Amazon face many different threats. Not only are their territories targeted for illegal extractive activities such as gold mining and deforestation but without clear land titles their situation remains legally precarious.

But more than this – indigenous peoples and local communities offer a scalable, climate solution, as recently recognised in the UN IPCC Land Use report.

Protecting their rights will benefit communities, the Amazon itself and all of humanity.

In the Peruvian Amazon the community of Boca Parimanu, the Amahuaca peoples tread this difficult balance.

Madre de Dios, the most biodiverse region in the Peruvian Amazon, is home to 37 native communities. This southern region is also the most affected by illegal mining, more than 60 000 hectares of forest have been deforested by this activity.

Due to its high biodiversity and extension of Amazon forest, Madre de Dios is a key region for climate commitments and the fight against the climate crisis.

Made in partnership with FENAMAD, SPDA and Land Tenure Facility.

Thank You Guardians of the Forest

There is a ready-made solution for climate change.
When Indigenous and local people are supported, forests remain standing, biodiversity is protected and the climate benefits. You can help save forests and solve the climate crisis by supporting these communities across the world who are fighting on the front line to protect acres of tropical forests that are at risk of being destroyed.

David Attenborough, Greta Thunberg and Jane Goodall Want to Talk to You about Climate Change

From disappearing species to plastic pollution and our disastrously weak attempts to recycle it, here’s what the top voices on climate change – from Sir David Attenborough to Jane Goodall to Greta Thunberg – have to say about the planet’s escalating biodiversity crisis.

“We’ve stolen our children’s future – and we’re still stealing it.” –Jane Goodall.

Sir David Attenborough, Jane Goodall and Greta Thunberg are joined in this global call for action by Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, the United Nations’ Cristiana Pasca Palmer, Daniela Fernandez of Sustainable Ocean Action, Brune Poirson, Malek Sukkar and Heather Koldewey.