
ACTION MAPPING
Since 2014, we have partnered with organizations in Peru and Bolivia to conserve more than 2 million hectares of forest across 25 protected areas and Indigenous territories, directly benefiting over 25,000 people.
Boots-on-the-Ground
We currently focus our efforts on seven eco priority regions: Santa Cruz, Pando, and La Paz in Bolivia, Madre de Dios and Cusco in Peru and Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul in Brasil,

STRATEGIC INTEREST
BOOTS ON THE GROUND
Geographic Focus
Our immediate strategic geographical focus is the Grand Arch of Tropical Forests.
This unique landscape connects the Amazon, Chiquitano, and Pantanal biomes in central-western South America and spans nine major ecoregions across four countries.
It stretches from the Pantanal wetlands and tropical dry forests of eastern Bolivia to the northern edge of the Peruvian Amazon, reaching towards Ecuador and Colombia.
The Grand Arch encompasses the largest concentration of protected areas, intact Indigenous territories, and connected forest landscapes in South America.
It is characterised by exceptionally high biodiversity and comparatively low deforestation rates, making the central-western Amazon a critical stronghold for conservation.
The region functions both as a bulwark against the deforestation frontier advancing from the east and as a vital contributor to global climate change mitigation.

​​Strategic Connectivity Objective
Our immediate and ambitious conservation objective is to achieve full landscape connectivity within the Grand Arch of Tropical Forests. If fully realised, the Grand Arch would encompass tens of millions of hectares, surpassing most existing initiatives in both scale and ecological diversity.
It represents one of the world’s most ambitious connectivity efforts - linking forests across national borders into what could become the planet’s largest continuous tropical forest landscape under protection and sustainable management.
