As of September 1, 2024, we mark the 4th anniversary of the WWF-VELUX partnership, an initiative dedicated to protecting and restoring forests and improving livelihoods. Over the past year, our joint efforts have seen substantial progress within the countries in which we work.
Project highlights: Restoring and protecting forests
Uganda
The most advanced project, now in its third year, has initiated the restoration of 726 hectares of tropical forest with an estimated more than 290,000 native tree seedlings. Alongside the forest protection and restoration work, 382 local community members have been supported with alternative livelihood activities, such as agroforestry, beekeeping, and village loan associations.
Madagascar
Initiated in 2023, this project has already initiated the restoration of 60 hectares of mangroves by planting more than 24,000 native seedlings from community-led nurseries. Collaboration with local authorities and communities is at the heart of this effort, ensuring both ecological and social benefits.
Validation and verification
All three forest projects are aiming to be validated under Verra’s Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) and Climate, Community, and Biodiversity Standards (CCB). We expect to share the first verified carbon impact figures from Uganda in the next couple of years.
Triple-benefit projects: Supporting climate, nature, and people
The partnership’s forest projects are all triple benefit, focusing on climate, nature, and people. Project activities, therefore, include alternative livelihood activities to provide the local communities with alternative income sources through activities such as beekeeping, agroforestry, coffee growing, village loan and savings associations (VSLA), and goat rearing. These activities are well underway in Uganda and similar alternative livelihood activities will be implemented in Madagascar and Viet Nam.
In addition to alternative livelihood activities, the three forest projects seek to establish a sustainable supply of wood products, needed by the communities. Busobozi Moses, a resident of the Kibaale district in Uganda and father of 11 children, is an example of one of the community members who is being supported in his effort to establish a woodlot on his land.
Like many tree growers in the area, he has received 7,000 seedlings, which have been planted on 12.5 acres of land – creating an alternative supply of forest products and reducing the dependency of communities on the forest that the WWF-VELUX partnership works to protect and restore. He hopes to generate profit to construct a maternity hospital in the area and he would like one of his children to become a doctor.