Isana and Surubí Indigenous Territory

In the heart of Vaupés

100000 +

ha

of rainforest under active protection by 2024

0

families

with 279 beneficiaries supported through targeted programs

0

%

of average anual reduction in deforestation

0

million

 tCO₂e

already avoided through verified carbon credits

Contribution to the SDGs

Environmental impact

Covering 133,806 hectares, the project preserves over 400 million tCO₂e in forest biomass and will deliver verified net reductions of 71.6 million tCO₂e. Certified under Cercarbono (ICROA-endorsed), it is validated by Icontec, verified by Versa, and officially listed in the EcoRegistry. With strong environmental safeguards, it supports SDGs 13 and 15.

73 million tCO₂e

stored in protected forest biomass

Monitoring

ArcGIS · Avenza Maps · satellite

Social results

Four healthcare staff operate across 25 service sites. Thirty solar panels have been installed. The project created jobs and supports students in higher education. It works with the Ñamepaco communities. Upcoming goals include better housing and bridges, churches, and guest facilities.

Education

3 schools and 65 students supported

Internet coverage

100% connectivity of project communities

Turn verified impact into real climate action​

Our projects deliver measurable, high-quality carbon results and direct community benefits. Explore how your company can support verified action on the ground.

Life across the project area

Dive deep into the project

Project Documentation

Access the most recent project documentation on EcoRegistry by searching the original Spanish registry names: “Proyecto REDD+ Zona Isana y Surubi” (CDC-67), or clicking here.

The CERCARBONO “REDD+ Methodology for the Implementation of REDD+ Projects Consistent with National Reference Levels” quantifies emissions reductions from avoided deforestation by integrating rigorous carbon accounting with community-led conservation efforts.
It ensures environmental integrity through satellite monitoring, sustainable land-use planning, and the active participation of indigenous and local communities. For more details, visit
Methodologies – Cercarbono.