LAC needs better fiscal policies to finance its development
December 09, 2024
October 28, 2024
Last night’s gathering featured Costa Rica’s Foreign Minister, Arnoldo Andrés Tinoco; CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean – President, Sergio Díaz Granados; and Panama’s Special Representative for Climate Change, Juan Carlos Montero.
Colombian Foreign Minister Luis Gilberto Murillo emphasized the strong link between cultural and biological diversity, noting that the Chocó Biogeographic region is one of the most biodiverse places on Earth per square meter, protected by its people. He urged the world to recognize this, stating that “this visibility is essential to support the people who live there. Conservation here is a cultural reality, a service to humanity that has gone unrecognized and uncompensated. This COP belongs to the people and must be about implementation.”
Minister Murillo added, “This is why we insist on amplifying voices, resources, and environmental justice” and highlighted the establishment of the Multidonor Fund as “a significant step forward.”
He explained that Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Panama share ecosystems, making “this initiative of utmost importance,” and pointed out that “for many years, the Chocó Biogeographic region has been championed by naturalists, scientists, activists, social leaders, and the region’s ethnic communities.”
Vice President and Equality Minister Francia Márquez emphasized that the fund is a step toward “ethnic justice” and proposed community participation in its governance: “Governance cannot be limited to the states; it must include community representation” to ensure transformative projects that contribute to conservation goals and local well-being.
Costa Rica’s Foreign Minister praised the opportunity to join the launch of the Multidonor Fund for the Conservation and Restoration of the Chocó Biogeographic Region and other areas, stressing that “our collective efforts are far more effective when we work together towards ecosystem conservation and sustainable development.” He affirmed Costa Rica’s commitment to conservation.
About the Multidonor Fund
The Multidonor Fund will support conservation and restoration efforts, biodiversity and ecosystem preservation, climate change mitigation and adaptation, and sustainable development within the Chocó Biogeographic region and other interconnected ecoregions.
The Chocó Biogeographic region is an expansive zone stretching from the Pacific coasts of Ecuador, Colombia, and Panama, extending into the Caribbean, hills, and mountain ranges that converge with Costa Rica’s neotropical forests. This ecological connectivity forms a bridge for biodiversity distribution and is renowned worldwide for its lush natural wealth and extraordinary diversity.
However, the region faces significant threats: deforestation, illegal mining, wildlife trafficking, and social conflicts endanger the ecosystems and communities reliant on them. These challenges demand urgent, united action to protect this invaluable cultural and natural heritage, crucial for local populations and global ecological balance.
Organized communities, including Afro-descendant and Indigenous peoples and local communities, are essential to the Chocó Biogeographic region’s cultural diversity. Their legacy of resilience and adaptation, along with their deep environmental knowledge, make them vital contributors to biodiversity conservation and sustainable development.
To advance fund formulation, structuring, and implementation, the parties agree to invite CAF – Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean – to support these efforts.
The Governments of Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Panama call for collaboration, inviting international organizations, the private sector, specialized funds, philanthropic organizations, and other potential donors to join civil society in safeguarding the Chocó Biogeographic region as a stronghold of biodiversity and resilience against global environmental challenges. Let us form new alliances for biodiversity protection, climate justice, and sustainable development to ensure a prosperous and sustainable future together.
December 09, 2024
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