Unu-Mai REDD+

Guardians of the Forest and Water: Indigenous Conservation in the Heart of Guainía

The UNU-MAI REDD+ Project spans a biologically and culturally rich region in the department of Guainía, within the municipality of Inírida. It includes the Indigenous reserves of Laguna Niñal, Cocuy, Loma Baja, and Loma Alta, whose territories stretch along the Guaribén and Bocón creeks. The project name merges two Indigenous languages — UNU (forest, in Sikuani) and MAI (creek, in Puinave) — emphasizing the deep bond between the rainforest and the waterways that sustain life in these territories.

This initiative aims to conserve 144,520 hectares of Amazon rainforest by protecting strategic ecosystems and directly benefiting over 549 members of the local Indigenous communities. Through the REDD+ strategy, it seeks to strengthen Indigenous governance, preserve biocultural heritage, and foster sustainable development in harmony with ancestral knowledge and the territorial rights of the Sikuani and Puinave peoples.

Total project area

144.520 hectares

People directly benefited:

549

Location:

Guainía, Inírida

Certificador:

Certification body:

Biome:

Amazon / Tropical Humid Forest

Proponents:

Indigenous Reserves of Laguna Niñal, Cocuy, Loma Baja, and Loma Alta

Validator:

ICONTEC

Verifier:

ICONTEC

Conserved area:

131.854

Associated SDGs

SDG icon Climate Action
SDG icon Life on Land

What Projects Have Been Implemented?

Community-Based REDD+ Approach
The UNU-MAI REDD+ Project promotes an intercultural and participatory vision for Indigenous territorial conservation. By reinforcing autonomous governance, the project empowers the Puinave and Sikuani communities as key actors in forest protection. Strategies include fostering intercultural dialogue, recovering traditional practices, and enhancing organizational capacities — all with a strong focus on sustainability and respect for ancestral knowledge systems.

Exchange of Experiences Among Community Leaders

A platform for dialogue and learning between Afro-descendant leaders and Indigenous authorities from the Sikuani and Puinave peoples. This initiative strengthens governance, promotes knowledge-sharing on territorial protection, and enriches the organizational structures of the reserves.

Strengthening the Indigenous Guard

This initiative consolidates the presence and operational capacity of the Indigenous guard, who serve as defenders of territory, culture, and collective rights, through training, equipment provision, and community recognition.

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