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International Partnerships

GCCA+ in Suriname – Young forest rangers protect the Amazon forest

Hovering above the immense canopy of Suriname’s Amazon forest, a drone captures bird’s-eye images of a group of young people as they prepare to enter the trees. Domitsio, Fransje, Fernando and Priscilla have all grown up in the nearby village of Pusugrunu on the Saramacca river, and they know this area well.

Now the four friends – who have all been trained as Forest Rangers – are using their local knowledge to help protect the rainforest. Today they will spend their time inspecting, measuring, and collecting data on logging in the forest. They have received training from the Amazon Conservation Team through the EU’s flagship climate change programme, GCCA+. The training programme aims to strengthen the government’s capacity to collect data and monitor logging on the ground, and thus protect the remaining forest landscapes.

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Forest Conversation Programme in Suriname ©EU/GCCA+, Credit: Harvey Lisse

Before setting to work, the rangers make a stop at the local school, where Fransje shows the students a documentary film about the traditions and lands of the Matawai people. The Matawai Maroons of Suriname, descendants of formerly enslaved Africans who fled into the rainforest, have lived in their ancestral territory for hundreds of years.

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Students in local school watch a documentary about ancestral territory ©EU/GCCA+, Credit: Harvey Lisse

Then it’s into the pickup trucks and the dense Amazon forest, where felled tree trunks can be seen on the side of the road, cut down by the logging companies working in this part of the forest. Fernando and Domitsio inspect, measure, and record the trees cleared to make a new road, while Priscilla writes down the data.

The youngsters come across a tree that has been cut down and pushed to one side by a logging company to create what’s known as a ‘skid trail’ – a temporary road to give access to new timber clearing sites. Documenting the number, type and location of the felled trees is an important part of their training. Forest rangers are effectively the eyes and ears of the community’s leaders, helping them to act more quickly when crises arise, such as illegal incursions by miners or loggers.

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Measuring tree ©EU/GCCA+, credit: Harvey Lisse

The rangers’ regular reconnaissance and monitoring expeditions in the forest help protect biodiversity, deter incursions, and prevent environmentally destructive practices.

Training local people taps into the communities’ desire for sustainable development, income generation and food security. Once the training programme is complete, at least a third of the Forest Rangers will be young women like Fransje and Priscilla.

At the end of a long day in the forest, Priscilla heads back to Pusugrunu to be with her young children. Tomorrow the rangers will meet up again to discuss and review the data that they collected – and plan their next field trip.

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Priscilla and family © EU/GCCA+, credit: Harvey Lisse

About GCCA+

The Global Climate Change Alliance Plus (GCCA+) is a European Union-funded flagship initiative to help the most vulnerable countries address climate change. It focuses on building countries’ resilience to climate change and supporting them in implementing their commitments under the 2015 Paris Agreement on Climate Change, in line with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the new European Consensus on Development.