Latest News

Bezos Earth Fund increases marine conservation by $24.5 million

Head of Nature of the world's largest climate philanthropy, gave $24.5 million for coastal ecosystem protection as part of a plan that aims to create a cross-border marine Biosphere Reserve.

The Bezos Earth Fund has awarded four grants to local communities in Costa Rica and Panama. Colombia and Ecuador will also receive a grant.

The grants are part of a $1 billion plan to protect 30% of the land and oceans of the planet by 2030. The group of donors aims to contribute $5 billion in the same time period as part of the "Protecting Our Planet Challenge" with 10 other philanthropies.

The Bezos?Earth?Fund, and the wider coalition have deployed more than $3.5 billion of the $5 billion total.

Re:wild, an organization that helps partners establish and strengthen coastal reserves for turtles, hammerheads sharks and other marine species.

Cristian Samper, the Bezos Earth Fund’s director of nature, stated that "it's an extremely important area for species migration." "The only way to protect this area is by doing it transboundary."

He said that in two years, the four countries tripled the size?of the protected seas, to more than 600,00 square kilometres (231,660 square miles), across 10 different areas. The goal now is to create a biosphere reserve.

"That'll be the first of its kind in the world," said Samper, adding that the Fund is also examining a similar?"reserve" in the Pacific which would be five times as large as the continental United States.

The fund agreed to spend 100?million dollars helping the Pacific Region implement the global biodiversity goals and would announce the second set of grant in 2026.

This is the kind of work that you should be doing to move the needle toward 30 by 30. (Reporting and editing by William Maclean, Simon Jessop)

(source: Reuters)