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Peru
Read the message from Mr Rafael Rey,
the Production Minister of Peru here
.
Mr Rafael Rey (2nd right) meets Mr Hamid
Bayazi (2nd left) and Prof. Constantino Giorgetti (right)
First
trees are planted as part of
Tolerance
International’s Reforestation
Programme in
Peru
.

As
part of Tolerance
International's
Reforestation and Forestry
Management programme
, the first trees have been planted by the
10 de Octubre community which is part of the
San Juan
municipality
in the Loreto area of the Upper Amazon
Basin of Peru. The community, as part of the initial stages
of the programme, are now able to manage the planting and
management of the trees.
Working
with the top authorities on rain forest studies such as the
Institute
of Investigation
of the Peruvian Rainforest in South
America
we have taken the following approach: if you want to look
after the forest you must first look after the people
responsible for it – the locals.
Our
programme is not a hand out. Simply giving does not work as
it is not a long term solution.
We
have developed a system to both provide the locals with
their immediate needs and also lay the
foundations of long term sustainable economies. In the
process, these local communities will reforest and maintain
vast areas of the Peruvian Amazon.
We
use that money as an incentive. If you plant a tree, you
receive payment. This ensures that the local community is
involved immediately.

Each
tree needs to be maintained, so every month the tree is
checked and a maintenance fee is paid to the original
planter. This gives a residual income and ongoing
responsibility.
If
the village as a whole meets its target it receives a bonus
which can be used towards a small project.
For
every £1 paid, a small percentage is put aside as a sort of
trust fund or tax. As the trust fund
grows, a number of potential industry projects e.g., setting
up a fish farm, a small coffee plantation etc. will be
assessed and implemented by the locals.
By
the third year newly planted trees that have been properly
maintained will also be bearing fruits which can be used for
food and sold.
These
incentives have proved very successful in combating
deforestation, encouraging reforestation, putting a stop to
hunger and poverty, getting everyone in the community
involved and dramatically improved levels of
understanding.

Make a
donation to this programme
Or
find out other ways in which you can help by clicking
here
Reforestation
Programme/Education in Agriculture and Forestry
Management Skills to Impoverished
Communities.
At
TI-UK we are involved with programmes which promote
education and economic improvement for indigenous
people. One such project in the Loreto Region of
Peru
will have a significant environmenal impact.
By combining our social and economic programmes we can
make a very real contribution to the global requirement
to reduce carbon emissions.
Loreto
is Peru’s
northernmost and largest region,
covering almost one-third of Peru's
territory. It is sparsely populated due to its
remote location in the Amazon rainforest. The
indigenous population is forced to use the forest as
means of income. This results in 250,000 hectares
of forest being “slashed and burnt” each year, releasing
tens of millions of tons of
CO2 into the atmosphere. With your
help we can put a stop to this and further educate the
indigenous people of the region to start
planting rather than cutting and
burning.
Trees are being cut down for as little
as 15p a day to harvest the 'heart' of the local Palm
species. These trees can absorb over 600 tons of
CO2 for every hectare over their
life cycle. For the indigenous population, this is one
of their few means of income. So these trees are being
cut down, the 'heart' sold, the rest slashed and
burnt.

Tolerance
International is developing a programme in
partnership with the government of the Loreto
Region in Peru for the reforestation of 1 million
hectares of the upper Amazon basin. This first phase
of this programme has been submitted to CONAM [the
Peruvian National Designated Authority (NDA) under
the Kyoto accord] for approval as a CDM project.
This is in Association with,
Fondebosque, the
national environmental agency of Peru
and PROCREL, a consortium which includes the
National Institute of Natural Resources (INRENA),
The Institute for Investigation of the Peruvian
Amazon (IIAP), Nature and Culture International
(NCI) and The University for the Investigation of
the Peruvian Amazon (UIAP).
Hamid Bayazi, one of the trustees of
TI-UK, visiting the Loreto region with Yvan Vasquez
Valera, President of the Loreto, and the team in charge
of the natural resources in the region.
Why
not offset your company's carbon or sign up
to our TICOFF campaign?
Find
out more about what YOU can do to help by
clicking here!
Benefits
of the Carbon Offsetting Programme: •
Up to 250,000 hectares of rainforest saved
annually • Up to 600 tons of
CO2 captured per hectare of
reforestation • Replanting of trees in depleted
areas • Significant impact on global warming and
climate change • Preserving the Forest
/Alternative, sustainable, low impact
agriculture.
Benefits for Local
People: • New sources of sustainable,
low-impact industry through managed timber programmes.
• Redeployment of local people into other
low-impact, sustainable employment like
fish-farming. • Replanting areas which have
been deforested.
What we have Achieved:
-
•
Provided
livelihoods to 4 impoverished communities by
training them in agro-forestry.
-
•
200
additional acres
have been reforested with agro-forestry
systems in the 4 communities of the Iquitos
Nauta Highway for the capture of
carbon.
-
• 66
families have been selected
to work on 200 acres
that were reforested in the first year.
-
•
Implemented
a forest economic incentive system
where incentives were delivered to
the compliant communities.
-
-
What's
next:
-
•
Wind energy harvesting programme for the
development of an agricultural production plan
aimed at the street children of Chimbote.
-
• Energy from
Waste projects.
-
•
Hydroelectric
plant
in
the
Andes.
-
•
Production
of
bio-fuels
through
agro-forestry
systems
in
arid
and
semi-arid
areas
with
non-competitive
crops
in
the
community
of
Catacaos.
What you can do to
help: • £40 will supply a community
with equipment to harvest the trees, without
damaging them. • £9.50 per month will pay for
reforestation of one hectare of the Amazonian
rainforest. This captures at least 10 tons of Carbon
per year (equivalent
to the carbon emission of an average UK
resident). • £3 per month will sustain the
planting of a tree in the rainforest with a 20 year
life cycle.
Click
here to find
out how you can help!
or
Make
a donation to this programme
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