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Condoto Forest Conservation

The Condoto Project conserves forests in Condoto and Rio Iro, Colombia, reducing CO₂ emissions, restoring degraded lands, and promoting sustainable development. It also protects biodiversity, enhances ecological connectivity, and secures habitats for vulnerable species. [Out of Stock]

Project Type

Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+)

Registry

Verified Carbon Standard and Climate, Community, and Biodiversity Standard

Unit Type

VCU, CCBA

Methodology

VM0007 REDD+Methodology Framework(REDD+MF), Version 1.6

Project ID

VCS2723

Vintage

2021

Climate Impact: An estimated 243,836 tCO2e removed from the atmosphere annually.

 

Project Registry Link: Condoto Forest Conservation | Verified Carbon Standard

 

Request TEM’s Science-Based Due Diligence Report

Why support this project?

The Condoto Project protects 46,191 ha of tropical rainforest in Chocó, Colombia, an area threatened by deforestation from mining, agriculture, and illegal activities. It reduces CO₂ emissions, restores degraded land, and promotes sustainable forest management. The project also addresses social challenges by supporting governance, economic development, and environmental protection in Afro-descendant community territories.

Community Impact

The project enhances local well-being by improving education, healthcare, roads, and aqueducts. It actively involves Afro-descendant community members in decision-making through workshops, assemblies, and councils, ensuring transparency and participation. Additionally, it helps regulate mining activities and reduce mercury contamination through sustainable practices.

 

Biodiversity impact:

The project safeguards critical habitats and high conservation value areas, enhancing ecological connectivity. It protects vulnerable species like the jaguar (classified as a near threatened species), using GIS monitoring and camera traps to track the species’ presence. By preserving the rainforest, it maintains essential ecosystems and reduces environmental threats from deforestation.

Project Location

Real and Lasting Impact:

Permanence:

As per VCS method requirements, the proponents assessed risks to the project’s long-term sustainability, resulting in a 10% buffer allocation to safeguard against potential non-permanence.

Three main risk categories were identified and addressed:

  • Climate risks: High rainfall and proximity to water bodies pose flooding, pollution, and extreme weather risks. The project mitigates these by protecting natural forests and reducing ecosystem degradation.
  • Community risks: Challenges such as weak governance, economic instability, and lack of engagement could threaten permanence. To counter this, the project includes strong community participation and capacity-building initiatives.
  • Biodiversity risks: Sustainable land-use practices and active forest protection help prevent environmental degradation and maintain ecosystem stability.

By proactively addressing these risks, the project ensures long-term carbon storage and sustained environmental and social benefits.

Additionality:

Additionality refers to whether the emission reductions or removals would have occurred without revenue from the sale of carbon credits. A baseline analysis for the Condoto REDD+ Project identified that, without the project, deforestation would continue due to illegal mining, logging, agricultural expansion, and livestock farming—activities that remain the primary income sources for the community. It was found that investment and social barriers would not prevent continued forest degradation and that the project is not common practice – no similar large-scale initiatives exist in the region to address deforestation.

Because the local Afro-descendant and Indigenous communities lack the financial and governmental support to implement such conservation efforts independently, the project’s interventions—such as sustainable land-use planning, governance support, and biodiversity monitoring—are not business-as-usual. Therefore, the project is additional, as these critical activities would not occur without REDD+ funding.

Leakage:

The project addresses leakage by defining a leakage belt and implementing a targeted leakage mitigation strategy in accordance with VCS requirements.

To prevent displacement of deforestation, the project applies three key mitigation strategies:

  • Sustainable livelihoods: Introducing productive activities that improve socio-economic conditions, reducing reliance on deforestation-driven income.
  • Governance strengthening: Enhancing local governance structures to promote sustainable land management and prevent unauthorized land-use change.
  • Forest patrols: Establishing monitoring systems to detect and deter illegal activities that could shift deforestation outside the project boundaries.

The auditor’s validation report confirmed that leakage was properly assessed, justified, and aligned with VCS standards, ensuring the project’s overall climate impact remains credible.

 

SDGs: The project helps to address the following United Nations Sustainable Development Goals:

value

$14.00/Tonne of CO2e

Tonne of CO2e

Out of stock

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