Skip links

In December 2024, Ecuador completed a debt-for-nature swap to support Amazon conservation through the creation of the Amazon Biocorridor. While this provides economic relief, Amazonian leaders contend they were not included as key participants in the corridor’s design or funding decisions. What is a debt-for-nature swap? A debt-for-nature swap is an agreement in which a creditor forgives part of a country’s debt in exchange for investments in conservation projects. Ecuador’s first debt-for-nature swap occurred in 2023, where it converted $1.63 billion of debt into a $656 million loan. Under the deal, Ecuador committed approximately $450 million to the Galápagos Life Fund, which provides grants for conservation projects in the Galápagos Marine Reserve and the Hermandad Marine Reserve, according to the country’s Ministry of Environment. Former President Guillermo Lasso, with the then minister of environment, José Dávalos, and the former vice president of CONFENIAE, Lola Piaguaje, during the presentation of the Biocorridor. Image courtesy of Presidency of Ecuador. Former President Guillermo Lasso, with the then minister of environment, José Dávalos, and the former vice president of CONFENIAE, Lola Piaguaje, during the presentation of the Biocorridor. Image courtesy of Presidency of Ecuador. The country’s second swap converted $1.527 billion in debt — specifically global bonds, though authorities did not disclose the creditors — into a $1 billion loan with improved terms, facilitated by Amazon Conservation Designated Activity Company (DAC). The transaction received backing from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), Bank of America, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), and The Nature…This article was originally published on Mongabay

Research

Featured News

Air pollution filters help scientists produce first UK wildlife survey using eDNA

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Social media post led to discovery that samplers measuring toxic particles in air can also

England’s swimming waters five times more likely to be polluted than in EU, research finds

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Experts warn country is in danger of becoming ‘dirty man of Europe’ as it falls

High temperatures threaten to reignite blaze after France’s largest wildfire in decades

Hello August 14, 2025
0

VILLEROUGE LA CREMADE, France (AP) — Firefighters and local authorities remained on high alert Friday

Heat alert for England as temperatures forecast to climb back above 30C

Hello August 14, 2025
0

UK Health Security Agency warns of potential rise in deaths as hot weather sweeps in

Rapidly spreading brush fire prompts evacuations for thousands in California

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Canyon fire in Ventura county, north of Los Angeles, is a ‘very dynamic situation’ and

World lion day: Why is the king of the savanna declining?

Hello August 14, 2025
0

The lion, with its majestic mane and the loudest growl of all the big cats,

Indigenous alliance unveils Brazil’s first Native-led emissions strategy

Hello August 14, 2025
0

Brazil’s largest Indigenous organization has launched the country’s first Native-led strategy to cut greenhouse gas

As Africa pays the price for rich world’s fast fashion fix, new French bill targets brands

Hello August 14, 2025
0

NAIROBI — Mountains of waste stretch as far as the eye can see, smoking in