AT A GLANCE
- Implementing partners: USAID, Solidaridad, Earth Innovation Institute, National Wildlife Federation, University of Wisconsin – Madison
- Project Duration: 2022-2027
- Locations: Brazil (Pará and Mato Grosso), Colombia (Caquetá and Meta), and Peru (San Martín and Ucayali)
ABOUT AMAZONIA CONNECT
The Amazon rainforest is the world’s largest remaining tropical rainforest. By absorbing a significant proportion of global carbon dioxide emissions, it helps avoid the worst effects of global climate change. However, deforestation fueled by unsustainable land use and agriculture threatens to turn the region into a net carbon producer where it emits more carbon than it absorbs.
Amazonia Connect is a five-year activity (2022-2027) that seeks to accelerate the shift towards low-emission commodity production and biodiversity conservation, and reduce deforestation in regions that supply agricultural products to international and domestic markets. The work connects the efforts of the public and private sector to drive change in the sustainable production and consumption of agricultural commodities.
Our Approach
Amazonia Connect operates across four thematic areas to create an enabling environment that can reduce commodity-driven deforestation and habitat loss, support resilient livelihoods, and contribute to global efforts to avoid the worst effects of climate change.
Geographic Scope
Amazonia Connect is being implemented in the Amazon biome in regions across Brazil, Colombia and Peru where expanding agriculture and livestock production is leading to rapid deforestation. These three countries comprise 80 percent of the Amazon land area.
Our work is focused on these commodities and regions:
- Brazil: beef in Pará and Mato Grosso
- Colombia: beef, dairy and coffee in Caquetá, and beef in Meta
- Peru: coffee in San Martín, and palm oil in Ucayali
News & Profiles
- About face in the Amazon: Rotational grazing helps families find a way to farm better, 2024
- Celebrating progress in Brazil: Building connections for low-carbon livestock supply chains, 2024
- Reducing emissions, improving conservation and livelihoods in the Amazon: Year 1 of Amazonia Connect, 2024
- Scaling up jurisdictional approaches: Opportunities and challenges in the Amazon, 2023
- Low-carbon agriculture: A forward-looking approach to farming, 2023
- Introducing transformative gender & social inclusion models in rural supply chains in Peru, 2023
- Carbon credits & carbon markets: Unlocking benefits for smallholder farmers, 2023
- Meet Jeremías: A coffee farmer adapting his farm to conserve & provide, 2023
- How monitoring and traceability tools contribute to conservation, 2023
- Scaling up Jurisdictional Approaches: Opportunities and Challenges in the Amazon, 2023
- Moving towards a more inclusive and sustainable oil palm sector in Peru, 2024
Publications and Resources
- Gender and Generational Gap Analysis in the Livestock Sector of Caquetá (in Spanish), 2024
- Protected Areas in the Brazilian Amazon Threatened by Cycles of Property Registration, Cattle Ranching, and Deforestation, 2024. Malena Candino, A. Brandão, Jr. , J. Munger, Lisa Rausch, and Holly K. Gibbs
- Study on Gender Equity in Coffee Farming: Motivations, Expectations, and Life Projects of Youth from Coffee Farming Families in Caquetá (in Spanish), 2024
- Study on the Motivations of Dairy Producers Regarding Productive Conversion (in Spanish), 2024
- Conservation value and biodiversity indicators for properties and supply chains in Colombia, 2023.
- Monitoring Primary & Fallow Forests Using Satellite Imaging on Coffee Farms, 2023. Geobosques
- Protected areas still used to produce Brazil’s cattle, 2022. Thales A. P. West, Lisa Rausch, Jacob Munger, Holly K. Gibbs
- Amazonia Connect brochure, 2024. USAID