The project in Peru's Loreto region and implemented by Profonanpe, ran from 2017 to 2024 and aimed to strengthen the resilience of indigenous communities by promoting sustainable practices and conservation efforts. The project targeted 120 indigenous communities and aimed to directly benefit over 20,000 people, ultimately achieving a reduction of 1.31 million tons of CO₂ equivalent emissions through various interventions.
In terms of overall achievement, the project enhanced climate resilience through the establishment of three Municipal Environmental Conservation Areas (ACAs) contributing to biodiversity conservation, implementation of 63 solar-powered bio-businesses, involving 131 indigenous communities (15,720 families) with active participation from women, who represented 47% of those involved in business initiatives, and establishing 410,366 hectares of conservation areas. Eight photovoltaic plants were installed promoting clean energy solutions and five water treatment facilities, while 23 community forest monitoring committees were supported. The integration of gender-sensitive approaches from inception led to many women assuming leadership roles in managing productive systems.
Key lessons learned include the importance of: (i) an intercultural and participatory approach in implementing solutions in indigenous contexts; (ii) Success required engaging local actors and adapting training to local knowledge systems and languages. Institutional engagement with subnational governments and indigenous organizations proved essential for social acceptance and sustainability; (iii) and maintaining operational flexibility and climate-related challenges specific to the Amazon region.
The comprehensive exit strategy focused on building local technical capacities, and establishing preventive maintenance mechanisms for equipment used in bio-businesses. To ensure sustainability, partnerships with local suppliers and the delivery of technical manuals to community members were emphasized. This intervention significantly contributes to GCF objectives by demonstrating how decentralized renewable energy solutions can be successfully implemented and promoting equitable access in climate vulnerable regions while respecting indigenous knowledge systems. The lessons learned can inform future interventions promoting community resilience for replication in similar contexts.
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Building the Resilience of Wetlands in the Province of Datem del Marañón, Peru
Documents
Document
Topics
Beta
Search results
Approved funding proposal
(Original Language)
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Gender action plan
(Original Language)
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Annual Performance Report
(Original Language)
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Annual Performance Report
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Annual Performance Report
(Original Language)
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Annual Performance Report
(Original Language)
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Annual Performance Report
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Annual Performance Report
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Annual Performance Report
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Evaluation report
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Annual Performance Report
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Summary
About this project
Approval FY
2015
Geography
Fund
Green Climate Fund
Fund Spend
$6,240,000
Co-Financing
$2,870,000
Status
Under Implementation
Theme
Cross-cutting
Implementing Agency
Peruvian Trust Fund for National Parks and Protected Areas
Sector
Public
Result Area
Forest and land use, Livelihoods of people and communities
Type
Project
Source
Topics
, ,
Topics mentioned most in this project Beta
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Group
Topics
Target
Policy instrument
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience
Finance
Note

Project information is sourced from Green Climate Fund. Please check terms of use for citation and licensing of third party data.