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Wildlife Works mengembangkan proyek-proyek perlindungan hutan bekerja sama dengan masyarakat lokal untuk melindungi beragam ekosistem yang ada di bumi.

Jika masyarakat adat dan komunitas lokal yang memegang kendali dalam melindungi hutan dan semua makhluk hidup di dalamnya

Sangat memungkinkan untuk manusia dan satwa liar hidup berdampingan..

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PILAR UTAMA KAMI

Wildlife Works memiliki pendekatan holistik untuk melindungi hutan dengan memberikan pembiayaan langsung kepada masyarakat lokal untuk tujuan pembangunan mereka sendiri.

Forest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
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BERBASIS

EKOSISTEM

Elephant in Kenya
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MELINDUNGI KEANEKARAGAMAN

HAYATI

Farmers in Cambodia
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BERFOKUS PADA

MASYARAKAT

Apa yang kami lakukan untuk:

MITRA KOMUNITAS KAMI

Village Chief in Democratic Republic of the Congo

KEPALA SUKU BASABA BOOT'OMBALA
MAI NDOMBE, REPUBLIK DEMOKRATIK KONGO

"Since we began working with Wildlife Works, I have started to recover everything I had lost.

 

The animals are coming back, and since our sacred sites are now protected from the logging company, I have regained my powers."

Man in Colombia

GILDARDO CALDERÓN
PUTUMAYO, KOLOMBIA

"Kami bergantung pada bumi untuk kehidupan keluarga kami. Oleh karena itu kami merasa bertanggung jawab untuk selalu menjaga lingkungan kami agar tetap sehat."

Female Farmer in Democratic Republic of the Congo

ANNE BOKUTU BOLEKOKA
IBU DAN PETANI LOKAL

"Proyek Wildlife Works memperhitungkan masalah diskriminasi gender. Ada inisiatif besar untuk melibatkan perempuan dengan pertanian berkelanjutan.

Berkat pendapatan dari proyek ini, saya bisa menyekolahkan anak-anak saya."

Man in Democratic Republic of the Congo

KOMUNITAS ENGOKULU WANZA , REPUBLIK DEMOKRATIK KONGO

"Perusahaan penebangan menghancurkan hutan kami dan menakut-nakuti hewan dengan mesin mereka yang berisik. Bahkan di masa kolonial pun kami tidak melihat sekolah dan klinik yang kami miliki sekarang. Kami telah dilupakan."

Teacher in Democratic Republic of the Congo

MBOBA ERASME
DI DESA MPILI REPUBLIK DEMOKRATIK KONGO

"Kami para guru belum menerima dukungan yang cukup dari negara.

Setelah bermitra dengan Wildlife Works untuk melindungi hutan, sekarang kami memperoleh dana lebih banyak untuk membangun sekolah."

Woman at the The Kasigau Corridor REDD+ Project in Kenya

GRACE MWACHUGHA
KORIDOR KASIGAU, KENYA

"Sejak Wildlife Works bekerja keras untuk melindungi hutan dan satwa liar, perusahaan yang  memproduksi batu bara telah menurun secara signifikan. Saya senang melihatnya karena artinya hutan kembali menjadi sejuk karena pepohonan kini bekerja mengatur suhu udara."

Village Chief at the Mai Ndombe REDD+ Project in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

KEPALA SUKU NKONSANGO NDALA
MAI NDOMBE, REPUBLIK DEMOKRATIK KONGO

"Kami menghargai Wildlife Works yang berkomitmen dalam jangka waktu panjang, tidak seperti perusahaan lain yang hanya menyumbangkan barang-barang seperti pompa air dan setelah pompa air itu rusak, mereka pun pergi."

Village Chief in Indonesia

CHIEF MARTAWI

BATAMPANG VILLAGE, INDONESIA

Wildlife Works Indonesia ensures full transparency throughout the Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) process, which is crucial for the community.

DAMPAK GLOBAL

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1.3m

LUASAN HUTAN YANG BERHASIL DILINDUNGI

53m

SERTIFIKASI KREDIT REDD+ ATAS PENCEGAHAN DEFORESTASI
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214k

MITRA MASYARAKAT
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20

SPESIES IUCN YANG TERANCAM PUNAH DAN BERHASIL DILINDUNGI
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HECTARE

One hectare is roughly equivalent to two football fields (10,000 square meters).

AVOIDED DEFORESTATION CARBON CREDITS

One carbon credit is equal to one metric ton of carbon dioxide. Avoided deforestation is defined as preventing deforestation by creating a change in policy, funding, actions, goals, etc. By stopping deforestation that would have happened if our projects did not exist, we can prevent carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere. One metric ton of carbon dioxide is roughly equivalent to the amount of carbon dioxide that 40 mature tropical rainforest trees breathe in each year. However, each species of tree is different, and various environmental factors can affect this rate. That is why our on-the-ground teams meticulously work to analyze the amount of carbon in each of our project areas every year.

COMMUNITY PARTNERS

Community partners include all of the people who live in the project area and are impacted by project activities.

IUCN ENDANGERED SPECIES

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) is the leading authority on determining the conservation status of each species. After extensive research, species are listed on a scale of Not Threatened (NT) to Extinct (EX).

Kantor di Inggris Raya
Kantor di Vermont
Kantor Pusat Global di California
Jaguar
3 Proyek Horizon REDD+ di Ekoregion Pasifik Kolombia
Forest at the Mai Ndombe REDD+ Project in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
3 Proyek Horizon REDD+ di Kolombia Amazon
Bird
Kantor di Panama
Lion in Kenya
Kantor di Kamerun
Giraffe in Kenya
Kantor di Tanzania
Orangutan
Kantor di Indonesia
Elephant
Proyek REDD+:​ Kasigau, Kenya
Bonobos
Proyek REDD+: Mai Ndombe, Republik Demokratik Kongo
Kantor di Carolina Utara

CAKUPAN GLOBAL KAMI

TONTON

THE WILDLIFE WORKS ORIGIN STORY
Wildlife Works was founded in 1997 with a mission to develop solutions for wildlife conservation which work for local communities.
POACHER TO PROTECTOR
The Mai Ndombe REDD+ Project in the DRC employs over 20 eco-guardians, many of whom are former poachers.
ABOUT THE MAI NDOMBE REDD+ PROJECT
The Mai Ndombe REDD+ Project protects 300,000 hectares of critical bonobo and forest elephant habitat within the world’s second-largest intact rainforest and some of the most important wetlands on the planet, the Congo Basin.
WATER IS LIFE
At the Kasigau Corridor REDD+ project in Kenya, community members are investing carbon revenue into improving access to water for all.
PORTRAIT OF A RANGER: CONNIE
At the Kasigau Corridor REDD+ project in Kenya, Connie Mwandaa has helped pave the way for female rangers.
ABOUT THE KASIGAU CORRIDOR REDD+ PROJECT
The Kasigau Corridor REDD+ project is the world’s first and longest standing certified REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation) project.
EYES ON THE FOREST: TRACKING THE RETURN OF ENDANGERED SPECIES
The Congo Basin is the second largest rainforest in the world, and serves as a last refuge for several endangered species. The density of this rainforest makes it difficult to track the status of these species, which raises the question: how can we protect these species if we don’t know who’s there?
THE GOOD DOCTOR
Communities use carbon revenue to build a hospital at the Mai Ndombe REDD+ Project in the DRC 
BLACK WATER
The story of a community's fight to strengthen food security at Lake Mai Ndombe - "Lake of Black Waters."

MEDIA

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Wildlife Works develops forest conservation projects in partnership with communities who are safeguarding the most biodiverse ecosystems on Earth.

when conservation solutions are led by forest communities.

It is possible for wildlife and humans to thrive in harmony...

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