Overview
The Amazon biome is a vital global climate regulator. It is home to 47 million people, including 2.2 million Indigenous Peoples. The region is threatened by rising temperatures, prolonged droughts, extreme weather, and deforestation. Seventeen per cent of the forest is already lost, and another 17 per cent is degraded. Weak governance is exacerbating risks. The region is nearing a potential tipping point: if deforestation reaches 20 to 25 per cent, the forest could irreversibly shift to a savannah-like ecosystem, unleashing massive carbon emissions, destabilising rainfall patterns, and eroding biodiversity. Vulnerable communities are at the centre of both the challenges and the solutions.
The Amazonia Viva Programme aims to reduce over 8 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent over 30 years and enhance climate resilience for three million people across six countries. It targets Indigenous Peoples, persons of African descent, women, youth, the elderly, and people with disabilities. The project targets 183 million hectares of protected areas (out of 776 million hectares in the basin) and 45.6 million hectares of Indigenous Peoples’ territories (out of 237 million hectares) for improved low-emission and/or climate-resilient management.
The programme focuses on territories with low human development indicators, poverty, limited infrastructure, and a high dependence on natural resources. This combination leaves Indigenous Peoples and local communities vulnerable to climate shocks and systemic exclusion from markets, finance, and decision-making. To address these challenges, the programme strengthens land tenure and rights, promotes sustainable land use such as agroforestry, enhances food security and resilience, and fosters participatory governance. It also tackles financial barriers by providing technical assistance, institutional support, and dedicated financing windows for sustainable value chains, including measures to overcome gender-specific obstacles in access to credit.
Result areas
Countries
Regions
Priority groups
Project timeline
-
Pipeline
399 days
-
Concept note received
-
Funding proposal received
-
Cleared by GCF Secretariat
-
Cleared by iTAP
-
Legal opinion on AE's Internal Approval
-
-
Approved
44 days
-
Approved by GCF Board
-
FAA executed
-
-
Under implementation
186 days so far
-
FAA effective
-
-
To be completed
3,467 days to go
Not started
Other Data
- Size
- Large
- Project number
- FP284
- Risk category
- Category B
- Subtype
- Public sector
- Theme
- Cross-cutting
- Group
- Small Island Developing States
- Status
- Under implementation
- Duration
- 10
-
Total project value $ 899 million
-
Tonnes of CO2 equivalent avoided 8.5 million
-
Total number of beneficiaries 3.0 million
Financing
GCF-financing
0.0%
USD
Co-financing
0.0%
USD
USD 899
million
Show details
GCF-financing
- Loan USD 100,000,000
- Grant USD 100,000,000
- Total GCF-financing USD 200,000,000
Co-financing
- Loan USD 490,000,000
- Grant USD 209,468,000
- Total co-financing USD 699,468,000
Documents
-
Amazonia Viva Program
- Approved funding proposal
- 18 Nov 2025
- WorldBank
- FP284
-
Gender assessment for FP284: Amazonia Viva Program
- Gender assessment
- 27 Oct 2025
- WorldBank
- FP284
-
Gender action plan for FP284: Amazonia Viva Program
- Gender action plan
- 27 Oct 2025
- WorldBank
- FP284
-
Environmental and social safeguards (ESS) report for FP284: Amazonia Viva Program
- Environmental and Social Safeguards report
- 25 Sep 2025
- WorldBank
- FP284
Project contacts
Find the appropriate contacts for this project, including partner organizations and responsible entities.
See contact details
Project contacts
Entity info
-
Dr. Zhihong Zhang
Primary
Fund Manager, Global Climate Funds
GCF team
-
Press enquiries and interviews
-
GCF Communications
-
-
Request for information
-
GCF Information Disclosure
-
-
Project complaints and grievances
-
GCF Independent Redress Mechanism (IRM)
-
-
Integrity issues
-
GCF Independent Integrity Unity (IIU)
-
National Designated Authority
Ministry of Development Planning and Environment (Bolivia (Plurinational State of))
-
Mr. José Luis Llanos Rocha
Primary
Vice-minister of Strategic Planning of the State
Av. Mariscal Santa Cruz No. 1092 Casilla, No. 12814, La Paz, Bolivia (Plurinational State of)
-
Mr. Luis Enrique Chacon Diamantino
Secondary
Responsible for monitoring
Secretariat for International Affairs, Ministry of Finance (Brazil)
-
Dr. Mathias Jourdain de Alencastro
Primary
Secretary for International Affairs
Esplanada dos Ministérios, Bloco P, 6° andar, Brasilia, Brazil
-
Mr. Ivan Tiago Machado Oliveira
Secondary
Deputy Secretary for Sustainable Development Finance
Esplanada dos Ministérios, Bloco P, 6° andar, Brasilia, Brazil
-
Ms. Livia Farias Ferreira de Oliveira
Operational Focal Point
General Coordinator for Sustainable Finance
Esplanada dos Ministérios, Bloco P, 6° andar, Brasilia, Brazil
-
Ms. Luana Magalhães Duarte de Araújo
Operational Focal Point
National Planning Department (Colombia)
-
Mr. Rovitzon Ortiz Olaya
Primary
Associate Director for Strategic Foresight and National Development
Calle 26 # 13 – 19, Bogota, D.C, Colombia
-
Mr. Javier Pava Sánchez
Secondary
Director of Environment and Sustainable Development
Calle 26 # 13 – 19, Bogota, D.C, Colombia
Ministry of Environment and Energy (Ecuador)
-
Ms. Jessica Stefanía Gallegos Yaruquí
Primary
Undersecretary of Climate Change
Av. República de El Salvador N36-64 y Suecia 170135, Quito, Ecuador
-
Ms. Daysy Alexandra Cárdenas Bautista
Secondary
Climate Change Adaptation Director
-
Ms. Andrea Carolina Pareja Ruiz
Tertiary
Climate Change Adaptation Specialist
Ministry of Economy and Finance (Peru)
-
Mr. Henry Jr Espinoza Peña
Primary
Director General
Jr. Junin 319 - Cercado de Lima, Lima, Peru
Ministry of Oil, Gas and Environment (Suriname)
-
His Excellency Mr. Patrick Brunings
Primary
Minister
Prins Hendrikstraat #22, Paramaribo, Suriname
-
Mr. Ritesh Sardjoe
Secondary
Permanent Secretary for Environment
-
Ms. Vanuessa Gefferie
Secondary
Permanent Secretary for General and Financial Affairs