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The Rio Bravo climate action project involves the conservation and sustainable management of more than 153,000 acres of forest in northwest Belize.
It is estimated that the project will reduce, avoid or mitigate up to 8.8 million tons of carbon dioxide over 40 years by preventing deforestation and ensuring sustainable forest management.
The project is one of the first fully funded forest-sector projects implemented under the U.S. Initiative on Joint Implementation. It is taking place at the Rio Bravo Conservation and Management Area, 260,000 acres of mixed lowland, moist sub-tropical broadleaf forest.
Programme for Belize, the Nature Conservancy’s partner organization in Belize, manages the project and private reserve overall. A number of energy producers provided $5.6 million in funding for the first 10 years of the 40-year project. Investors include Cinergy, Detroit Edison, Nexen, PacifiCorp, Suncor, Utilitree Carbon Company and Wisconsin Electric Power Company.
The Rio Bravo Conservation and Management Area is situated amid the biologically rich Mayan forest. It is part of a million-acre corridor that is key to biodiversity conservation in Central America and one of the Conservancy's top conservation priorities. The area is home to the endangered black howler monkey and jaguar, numerous migratory birds, mahogany and other important tree species. It contains forest cover types protected nowhere else in Belize.
The project site was under imminent threat of conversion to agriculture. Studies undertaken before the project began indicated that without further protection, up to 90 percent of the forest cover would have been converted to agricultural use.
The project will reduce, avoid or mitigate an estimated 8.8 million tons of carbon dioxide through two primary approaches:
Prevention of deforestation. Programme for Belize purchased 33,000 acres of upland forest and added it to the existing protected area. Estimated carbon emissions avoided from this component are up to 7.2 million tons of carbon dioxide over 40 years.
Sustainable forest management and regeneration. On approximately 90,000 acres of land, a combination of improved timber operations and ecosystem management practices will sequester more than 600,000 tons of carbon. Management practices include creation of undisturbed buffer areas and protection zones; reduced-impact harvesting techniques; and enhanced fire management and site security.
The Rio Bravo Carbon Sequestration Pilot Project, one of several spearheaded by the Conservancy and its partners, is a model project demonstrating how saving forests is part of the solution to climate change.
Climate change picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © Tony Rath (Rio Bravo, Belize).