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The Nature Conservancy has brokered the largest debt-for-nature swap under the Tropical Forest Conservation Act — a deal that will secure long-term, science-based conservation for Costa Rica’s tropical forests:
And science — the Conservancy's hallmark — is at the center of the deal.
"This debt swap is unique in that it utilizes scientific analysis to determine the sites towards which the funds will be directed,” says Zdenka Piskulich, program director for the Conservancy in Costa Rica.
Costa Rica is a small nation — but it's home to some of the largest tracts of concentrated biodiversity on Earth. Its lush tropical forests are home to several endangered species such as jaguars, quetzals, scarlet macaws, howler monkeys, tree frogs and a host of other wildlife.
However, Costa Rica's natural treasures are under increasing pressure from human activity. Logging, development, agricultural expansion, gold mining, overfishing and unregulated tourism are just some of the factors threatening the country's ecosystems — and making the deal critical for nature and the people who depend on it.
"The funding that is a result of this debt swap will also allow local communities, 80 percent of which live in The Amistad Region, to pursue sustainable and economically viable livelihoods, thus improving their lives and sustaining the biodiverse resources on which they depend," said Piskulich.
The $26 million will be used to conserve Costa Rica’s magnificent forests in six areas — sites chosen from a blueprint of conservation gaps that the Conservancy helped create for Costa Rica.
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Debt-for-nature swaps are an innovative mechanism to sustain long-term conservation efforts in countries with rich tropical forests.
Countries eligible for a debt swap use their debt payments to finance tropical forest conservation under the guidelines of the Tropical Forest Conservation Act of 1988.
This agreement is the largest debt-for-nature swap under the Tropical Forest Conservation Act and the eighth swap facilitated by the Conservancy. The Conservancy and Conservation International contributed over $1 million in the United States toward the deal. The U.S. government is providing over $12 million towards the agreement.
The debt swap has been a coordinated effort between the Costa Rican Government, the Costa Rican Central Bank, the U.S. Treasury, U.S. State Department, the U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica, the Conservancy and Conservation International. The $26 million from the debt swap will be disbursed from a Conservation Trust Fund that will be managed by an oversight committee and administered by CRUSA (The Costa Rica USA Foundation).
Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © Sergio Pucci (sunset in the Osa Peninsula); Photo © Ken Miyata (frog).