• Home
  • About Us
  • Where We Work
  • Our Initiatives
  • News Room
  • Blog
  • My Nature Page

Places We Protect: Noel Kempff

 

Places We Protect: Noel kempff.

Support Our Work In Bolivia

donate.

With your help, we can protect places around the world like Bolivia's Noel Kempff Mercado National Park.

Climate, community and biodiversity

The Nature Conservancy co-founded the Climate, Community, and Biodiversity Alliance over 5 years ago, which involves stakeholders from both the North and South. The CCBA provides standards that promote native rights and environmental benefits, has been field tested and received positive reviews, and is now being modified for use in national programs and policies.



Waterfall in Noel Kempff Mercado National Park.

Through carefully monitored projects, like Noel Kempff in Bolivia, we demonstrate how carbon emissions can be reduced when forests, grasslands and other habitats are preserved or restored.

Global Carbon Dioxide Emissions

Climate change and global warming data: Global Carbon Dioxide Emissions

The combustion of fossil fuels and the destruction of the world's forests are the two main factors that have led to higher concentrations of heat-trapping gases in the Earth's atmosphere.

Climate-saving Tips

Everybody can contribute to solving the problem of climate change by taking their own actions to reduce energy consumption. See our recommended climate-saving tips

Places We Protect: Noel Kempff.

Named after a pioneer of Bolivia’s conservation movement, Noel Kempff Mercado National Park is where the Amazon rainforest meets dry Chiquitano forests. Seasonally flooded savannas,  forests, thorn scrub, rivers, wetlands, mesas, lagoons and black water bays also cover this vast area that is roughly the size of Massachusetts. With a great diversity of habitats and striking geological features such as the Huanchaca Plateau and breathtaking Arco Iris and Ahlfeld Falls, the 3.9-million-acre park is an amazing world to discover.

Location. Noel Kempff Mercado National Park is in northeastern Bolivia on the Brazilian border and its limits are determined mostly by rivers. The park is one of the largest, most intact parks in the Amazon Basin and is located in a transition zone between the dry Chiquitano forests in the south and the humid Amazon forest to the north on the southern fringe of the vast Amazonian watershed.

Animals. About 100 of the world's estimated 1,000 giant river otters live along Noel Kempff's waterways. Besides otters, other river creatures inhabiting the area include capybaras, pink river dolphins, and both black and spectacled caimans.

Noel Kempff has 139 mammal species, 74 reptile species, 62 amphibian species and 254 fish species. Tapirs, gray and red brocket deer, silvery marmosets, pumas, jaguars, maned wolves, giant anteaters, and spider and black howler monkeys are mammals of special interest. Harpy eagles, storks, Amazonian umbrella birds, helmeted manakins, hoatzins, rusty-necked piculet and more than 20 types of parrots are among the park's 620 bird species.

Plants. Noel Kempff is a mix of wet Amazon rainforest, dry Cerrado grasslands, forests, and thorn scrub. Orchids, bromelias and palms are among the park's 4,000 plant species. Mahogany, cedar and rubber trees also thrive here.

Why The Nature Conservancy Works Here

The region chronicled by the legendary British explorer Colonel Percy Fawcett during his 1910 expedition to demarcate national boundaries for the Bolivian Government and purportedly the paradise described in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 1912 novel "The Lost World" is under pressure from logging, ranching, and farming interests. Other threats include overfishing and overharvesting of river turtles and their eggs. These threats have prompted conservationists, local communities, government agencies and corporations to forge a unique partnership to protect a one-of-a-kind natural area.

What the Conservancy is Doing

Keeping trees standing in Bolivia not only provides animal habitat and benefits the local population in many ways such as watershed protection, but it also helps to regulate the world’s climate. When cleared or degraded, forests release carbon dioxide, one of the greenhouse gases proven to cause climate change. Deforestation from burning and cutting alone is responsible for as much as 20 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. Preventing deforestation and regenerating native forests reduces carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and protects biological diversity.

In 1997, the Conservancy, Fundación Amigos de la Naturaleza (FAN), the Bolivian government and three energy companies started the Noel Kempff Climate Action Project. The project used $1.6 million of its $9.6 million in initial funding to terminate logging rights on 2.1 million acres of government-owned land. With incorporation of that land into the park, Noel Kempff Mercado grew from 1.8 million acres (750,633 hectares) to 3.9 million acres (1,582,322 hectares).

The Noel Kempff Climate Action Project, the largest effort of its kind, is expected to avoid and/or mitigate the release of up to 5.8 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere before 2027 by preventing logging and agricultural conversion of the land and promoting carbon offsetting. American Electric Power, BP and PacifiCorp have all agreed to invest in the project alongside The Nature Conservancy. The project has been designed to simultaneously address climate change, conserve biodiversity and bring sustainable development benefits to local communities through:
 

  • the monitoring, verification and commercialization of carbon offsets resulting from the project.
  • a community support program that aids in the development of sustainable use and management of natural resources.
  • park protection that promotes forest conservation and prevents deforestation.
Project benefits
  • avoided 1,034,107 tons CO2 emissions, which would have been caused by logging and deforestation between 1997 and 2005; after 30 years, the project will have avoided the release of 5.8 million tons of carbon emissions.
  • guarantees carbon benefits through 2026;
  • preserves a rich and biologically diverse forest ecosystem.
The carbon reductions produced by the project could not have been achieved without the support of the native people who depend upon the region’s forests for their livelihoods. The Noel Kempff Climate Action Project has also enabled local community improvements. As a pilot project in the region, the work will help inform future projects.
 
The project has
  • provided legal assistance to native communities to help them acquire title  to 360,000 hectares (889,200 acres) of their traditional lands; 
  • improved access to health care services, potable water supplies, sanitation systems, road repairs and improved educational services including a scholarship program ;
  • encouraged the participation of community members in the Park’s management committee, and the hiring of community members as park guards and carbon monitoring technicians;
  • established a community forestry program that promotes the sustainable management of natural resources.
     

In 2005 the Project became the world’s first forest emissions reduction project to be verified by a third party based on international standards.  The project is  assisting  the Bolivian Government  in  developing  mechanisms for the sale of the carbon offsets and is supporting  communities and their leaders in taking a  pro-active role in designing the legal  structure that will allow them to collect compensation for their carbon offsets. 

The Christian Science Monitor recently visited our Noel Kempff Climate Action Project. Read the story.

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Flor de Oro camp sunrise at Noel Kempff Mercado National Park © Hermes Justiniano; Blue and yellow Macaw  Hermes Justiniano; Arco Iris Waterfall, Noel Kempff Mercado National Park; Hermes Justiniano.