NEW YORK, 4 October 2008: The Equator Initiative, a United Nations-led partnership that supports grassroots efforts in biodiversity conservation and poverty alleviation, has selected 25 winners of the Equator Prize 2008.
Chosen from 310 nominations, the winners embody innovation in astonishing variety, from mariculture to apiculture, eco-tourism to ethno-tourism, afforestation to mangrove restoration, oyster farming to cotton farming, seed banks to micro-credit lending, and elephant to hippo protection.
– The recipients of the Equator Prize 2008 are role models for communities across the globe, said Veerle Vandeweerd, director of the Environment and Energy Group of UNDP, in advance of the ceremony.
– Local groups are on the front lines of conservation and poverty reduction and it is critical that we recognize their sustainable practices and use their successes as a compass for policy formation. The Equator Initiative does just this, awarding outstanding leadership that reduces poverty through conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.
Each Equator Prize 2008 winner is testament to the linkages between ecosystem health and human well-being, to the indivisibility of conservation and poverty reduction as policy objectives, and to the significant contributions that local and indigenous communities are making to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
All 25 winners will be recognized at a high-level award ceremony on Monday at the World Conservation Congress in Barcelona, Spain where they will receive a prize of 5.000 US dollar.
In addition, five communities will receive “special recognition” and a total award of 20,000 US dollar. Special recognition will be awarded in three geographical regions (Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia and the Pacific), to the initiative that best exemplifies community approaches in adaptation to climate change, and to the initiative that best exemplifies the conservation of agricultural biodiversity.
Equator Prize 2008 winners:
Africa
1. Centre d’Appui au Développement Intégral/Mbankana (CADIM) – Democratic Republic of the Congo
2. Wechiau Community Hippo Sanctuary – Ghana
3. Kijabe Environment Volunteers (KENVO) – Kenya
4. Ketu Training Centre for Sustainable Development – Kenya
5. N≠a Jaqna Conservancy – Namibia
6. Fédération Régionale des Groupements de Promotion Féminine Ziguinchor – Senegal
7. Ujamaa Community Resource Trust – Tanzania
8. Community Markets for Conservation – Zambia
Asia & the Pacific
9. Tmatboey Community Protected Area Committee – Cambodia
10.The Indonesian Community-based Marine Management Foundation – Indonesia
11.Conservation Society of Pohnpei – Federated States of Micronesia
12.Camalandaan Agroforest Farmers Association – Philippines
13.Arnavon Community Marine Conservation Area Management Committee -Solomon Islands
14. Community Development Centre – Sri Lanka
15. Sri Lanka Wildlife Conservation Society – Sri Lanka
16. Nguna-Pele Marine Protected Area – Vanuatu
Latin America & the Caribbean
17. Cooperativa Agro-extrativista Yawanawa – COOPYAWA – Brazil
18. Polo de Proteção da Biodiversidade e Uso Sustentável dos Recursos Naturais – Brazil
19. Asociación de Apicultores de la Reserva de Tariquía AART – Bolivia
20. Chalalan Albergue Ecológico – Bolivia
21. Asociación de Productores Indígenas y Campesinos de Riosucio Caldas Asproinca – Colombia
22. Corporación Serraniagua – Colombia
23. Unión de Organizaciones Campesinas e Indígenas de Cotacachi – Ecuador
24. Asociación de Artesnas de Arbolsol y Huaca de Barro del Distrito de Mórrope – Perú
25. Asociación de Pobladores por el Progreso y Desarrollo de Campo Amor Zarumilla – Perú
Details about projects here: http://www.equatorinitiative.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=86&Itemid=253&lang=en
Kilde: UNDP