| Costa Rica | Forever Costa Rica |  | Costa Rica has 26 percent of its land area under various protection management categories. As in many other developing countries, however, challenges and threats are great. This is mainly due to the fact that development continues to pressure the ecological systems around terrestrial and marine protected areas. Overfishing, legal and illegal fishing, unregulated tourism development, urbanization, logging, and water pollution, sedimentation, the degradation of coral reefs and the depletion of fisheries, are threats that affect protected areas as well as other neighboring lands and waters. In addition, despite the enormous efforts made to date, Costa Rica’s protected area system still has conservation gaps that must be addressed if the desired ecological representation is to be achieved. |
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| Cameroon, Congo, Central African Republic | Conservation and management of the Sangha Tri-national Transboundary Forests Complex |  | This project is geared towards long-term conservation and management of one of central Africa's most important forest regions and involves tri-national transboundary cooperation under the auspices of COMIFAC, the Commission for the Forests of Central Africa. Funds will be used for the establishment of an infrastructure for the protected areas participating. These funds will help to bridge a financial gap until the foundation fund which is currently being established will provide capital interest for the management of the three protected areas. |
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| South Africa | Protection of wetlands in the Cape region |  | The project is geared towards protecting several large wetland areas in South Africa's cape region which are characterised by extremely high degree of biological diversity. These measures will comprise protection against fires, zoning measures geared towards reducing conflicts about the use of these areas, combating invasive species and water resources management. |
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| Kazakhstan | Expansion of the protected area network to conserve the Altai-Sayan region |  | With its focus on forest fire prevention - a major threat - the project is geared towards fighting mountain forest degradation in Kazakhstan's Altai mountains. To counteract the fragmentation of forest areas and to thus reduce their proneness to forest fires, new protected areas are to be linked to or set up alongside existing ones. |
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| Micronesia (Federated States of), Marshall Islands, Palau | Support for Micronesia Challenge through new protected areas |  | This project will increase the local population's adaptation capabilities vis-à-vis climate change through a network of new terrestrial, coastal and marine protected areas in the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia and Palau. The protected areas will also support coastal and nature conservation (e.g. measures to prevent erosion, to conserve mangroves and water resources). The project is a contribution to the participating governments' supranational development initiative Micronesia Challenge. |
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| Papua New Guinea | Indigenous forest conservation area Yus |  | This project supports the establishment and management of the YUS Conservation Areas in a tropical forest area with a high degree of biodiversity. The conservation area is fully owned by local communities who will be jointly responsible for the management of the area. |
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| Ukraine | Prevention of greenhouse gas emissions through renaturalisation and sustainable management of bogs in Ukraine |  | Over 50% of the 1 million ha of bog areas in Ukraine have been drained. Contact with oxygen leads to peat decomposition which in turn has a considerable negative impact on the climate. By waterlogging bog areas again, further greenhouse gas emissions can be prevented. However, this approach is not yet much used in Ukraine. Within the framework of this project, at least 20,000 ha of degraded bog areas are to be renaturalised. Moreover, parts of the newly waterlogged areas are to be integrated into protected areas to support Ukraine’s ambitious nature conservation program. The newly waterlogged bog areas will not only be of benefit with regard to the climate but also with regard to enhancing biological diversity. The use of biomass and other measures in these newly waterlogged areas can also contribute to improving the incomes of the local population. The establishment of a sustainable financing mechanism is to serve as an incentive for the Ukrainian government to continue to waterlog bog areas once the project has been concluded. Waterlogging also helps to reduce the negative health impact of fires on drained bog areas as these release radioactivity from the Chernobyl accident. |
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| Turkey | Adaptation to climate change and conservation of biodiversity through the protection and sustainable use of wetland areas |  | Turkey’s wetlands have a climate-stabilizing impact and thus contribute to mitigating the impacts of climate change; they also constitute a water reservoir and thus a resource for agriculture and the ecological balance that must not be underestimated in terms of climate adaptation. In addition, they serve as important breeding and migration areas for many endangered bird species. The goal of the project is to establish and test a concept for the conservation and sustainable use of the wetlands. At national level framework conditions for the conservation and sustainable use of the wetlands are to be enhanced and capacities to be strengthened. At local level pilot management plans for wetlands will be elaborated and implemented with the help of investment (e.g. renaturalisation and measures to prevent pollution). In addition, the project develops and promotes different types of sustainable wetland utilisation and thus contributes to safeguarding the sources of livelihood of the people living in the vicinity of wetlands. |
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| Russian Federation | Preservation of habitats in the Altai-Sayan region by expanding the protected areas network |  | The establishment of three new protected areas and the expansion of an existing one (in total 536,000 ha) and effective fire management in the existing and new protected areas contribute to the protection of large-scale boreal forests. This will also help to stem the expected climate change-induced increase in forest fires. At the same time, alternative income opportunities and sustainable usage methods will open up for local communities. |
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| Rwanda | Conservation of biological diversity in the Forêt de Nyungwe (Rwanda) through the establishment of an agroforestry conservation belt |  | Rwanda’s National Park “Forêt de Nyungwe” is the largest montane cloud forest in eastern Africa and hosts many unique species. However, in this densely populated country these areas are under considerable pressure for use. Therefore, a sustainable intensification of agricultural and forestry production in the adjacent zones to the cloud forest is indispensible if the pressure on the forest resources is to be reduced. The goal of this project is to conserve biodiversity and the functionality of the forest, which is both a CO2 sink and of vital importance for the region's water balance, by ensuring a smooth transformation to sustainable agriculture and forestry in the adjacent zones of the protected area. The establishment of agroforestry systems which simulate the forests' natural canopy levels, protect the soil from erosion and guarantee a high biomass yield per area unit, will render logging superfluous. This project is an important contribution to enhancing food security of small-scale farmers. |
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| Democratic Republic of the Congo | Integrated conservation project in the Ngiri Triangle |  | Together with an already existing project in the same area, structures for a protected area in the Northeast of the country with wetland and floodplain forests are to be established in order to contribute to improving the livelihood of the local population. This is an important stepping stone on the path towards the Congolese government's declared target of turning 15% of the country (mainly forest) into protected areas. |
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| Ethiopia | Climate protection and conservation of primary forests – Management models, example of wild coffee forests in Ethiopia |  | In the last 40 years Ethiopia has lost more than 90% of its forests. Ethiopia's montane cloud forests not only constitute important carbon sinks, they also contain genetic resources of global importance as the origin and the centre of genetic diversity of Arabica coffee. Nevertheless, forests have been substantially decimated due to the local population's need for firewood and conversion into agricultural land. This project is geared to easing the pressure on the remaining forests by establishing a biosphere reserve, by reducing the need for firewood through the establishment of community forest plantations, by introducing wood-saving stoves and by supporting new income opportunities for the local population. Carbon storage is to be improved through afforestation and rehabilitation of fragmented forest areas and degraded land. |
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| Peru | Conservation of biodiversity, adaptation to climate change and emission reduction through protected areas in the Peruvian Amazon region |  | Several individual projects aim at preserving tropical rainforest areas in the Peruvian part of the Amazonas by improving the management of existing protected areas (e.g. Communal Reserve El Sira, Pui Pui Protection Forest, Reserve Pampa Hermosa) and adjacent zones. At the same time the rich biodiversity of these areas will be protected. Integration of the local and in part indigenous population into the management of these areas, investments in sustainable resource utilisation measures and the creation of new income sources in the adjacent zones of the three existing protected areas will constitute the platform for long-term sustainable management. |
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| Indonesia | Adaptive and carbon-financed forest management in the Tropical Rainforest Heritage of Sumatra |  | The Tropical Rainforest Heritage of Sumatra (THRS) was inscribed in the World Heritage List in 2004. The site comprises three national parks (Gunung Leuser, Kerinci-Seblat and Bukit Barisan Selatan) and is of outstanding biological value, covering a forested area of over 2.5 million ha and offering the last refuge for globally threatened species including tigers, sumatran rhino, elephants and orang-utan. The constituent parks are surrounded by a mosaic of forested areas that double the total area of natural forest. These surrounding forests include a variety of different utilization purposes, have a high intrinsic value for biodiversity and create a buffer for the world heritage sites.
Despite the protected status, this globally important forest resource is under considerable threat. The extremely high pressure from direct threats is reducing the natural resilience of the forests to climate change. This project will take the globally important natural world heritage sites of Sumatra and pilot an approach to predict climate change impacts and incorporate adaptation into management plans. The project will also develop and pilot REDD schemes in buffer areas to mitigate climate change and to provide a mechanism to alleviate direct threats. |
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| Indonesia | Conservation and Restoration in Kalimantan/Borneo: Securing natural carbon sinks and habitats in the “Heart of Borneo” |  | Indonesia has one of the world’s highest deforestation rates. The project aims at long-term securing of forests in the central part of Borneo, the “Heart of Borneo”, in the vicinity of the Bukit Baka Bukit Raya National Park and the forests along Leboyan river through a combination of various measures. These include an improved management and the cooperation with a commercial logging company in order to implement the Forest Stewardship Council’s (FSC) guidelines. In close cooperation with local communities, i.a. in the reforestation of degraded areas, existing forest areas are to be linked again. |
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