1、NOT A MOMENT TO LOSE2021 ANNUAL REPORTCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:01DEADLINE FOR HUMANITY TO ACHIEVE CARBON-NEUTRALITY TO AVOID CLIMATE CATASTROPHECONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:00DEADLINE FOR A WORLDWIDE INITIATIVE TO PROTECT 30%OF EARTHS LAND AND OCEAN AREACONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATI
2、ON INTERNATIONAL00:00:0200:00:03WE DONT HAVE A MOMENT TO LOSE.THE CLOCK IS TICKING.CONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:0400:00:05CONTENTSAt Conservation International,we are proud to have some of the leading minds in natural and social science,policy,finance and business workin
3、g together to improve peoples lives through the care and protection of nature.Their insights are helping societies develop and thrive in a more sustainable,equitable way.00:00:0800:00:1000:00:1200:00:1600:00:3600:00:5000:00:6000:00:7800:00:8400:00:8600:00:112 00:00:11400:00:116BOARD OF DIRECTORSLEAD
4、ERSHIP COUNCILLETTER FROM THE CHAIRMANLETTER FROM THE CEONATURE FOR CLIMATEOCEAN CONSERVATION AT SCALEPLANET-POSITIVE ECONOMIESINNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND FINANCECONSERVATION AND COVIDOUR COMMITMENT TO DIVERSITY,EQUITY AND INCLUSIONWHATS NEXTREGIONAL AND PROGRAMMATIC BOARDS AND COUNCILSSENIOR STAFF L
5、ISTWAYS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCECONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:0600:00:07BOARD OF DIRECTORSCHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Peter A.Seligmann CEO,Nia TeroFounder,Conservation InternationalSeattle,Washington CHAIRMAN OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Wes Bush Former Chairman and Chief Executive
6、Officer Northrop Grumman Corporation McLean,Virginia VICE CHAIR Harrison Ford Actor Los Angeles,California BOARD MEMBERSJohn Arnhold Managing Member Arnhold LLC New York,New York Samantha BassPhotographerNew York,New YorkSkip Brittenham Senior Partner Ziffren Brittenham LLP Los Angeles,California Id
7、ris Elba,OBE Actor London,UK Andr Esteves Senior Partner Banco BTG Pactual S/A So Paulo,Brazil Mark Ferguson Founding Partner Generation Investment Management London,UK Robert J.Fisher Chairman of the Board Gap Inc.San Francisco,California Victor Fung,Ph.D.Chairman Fung Group Hong Kong Jeff Gale Pho
8、tographer,Philanthropist,FarmerLas Vegas,Nevada&Maui,Hawaii Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim Founder and Coordinator Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad(AFPAT)Conservation International Lui-Walton Senior Indigenous Fellow Paris,France Lisa Jackson Vice President,Environment,Policy and Social
9、Initiatives Apple,Inc.Cupertino,California Laurene Powell Jobs Founder and Board Chair Emerson Collective Palo Alto,California Hon.Andy Karsner Senior Strategist XThe Moonshot Factory (Alphabets Labs)Palo Alto,California Michael Klein Managing Partner M.Klein&Company New York,New YorkDavid Leuschen
10、Co-Founder and Senior Managing Director Riverstone Holdings New York,New York Yvonne Lui,Ph.D.Founder Yvonne Lui Trust Hong KongValerie Mars Mars,Inc.McLean,Virginia Isaac Pritzker Principal Tao Capital Partners San Francisco,CaliforniaL.Rafael Reif,Ph.D.President Massachusetts Institute of Technolo
11、gy Cambridge,Massachusetts Stewart A.Resnick Chairman of the Board The Wonderful Company Los Angeles,California LEADERSHIP COUNCILCHAIRPERSONKatie VogelheimTiburon,CaliforniaVICE CHAIRPERSONDaniel A.ShawWoody Creek,ColoradoMEMBERSCatherine AllchinSeattle,WashingtonLisa AndersonSeattle,WashingtonPatr
12、ice AuldSeattle,WashingtonSteven BellEstes Park,ColoradoKristina BrittenhamLos Angeles,CaliforniaTom ByersPalo Alto,CaliforniaKelly ChapmanSeattle,WashingtonAnisa Kamadoli CostaNew York,New YorkJohn de NeufvilleSanta Monica,CaliforniaAlan DynnerBoston,MassachusettsLisa DynnerBoston,MassachusettsMary
13、 C.GalloModesto,CaliforniaMichael HaasOakland,CaliforniaEllen Bronfman HauptmanLos Angeles,CaliforniaSarah E.JohnsonNew York,New YorkNick KukrikaLondon,United KingdomFrans LantingSanta Cruz,CaliforniaAileen LeePalo Alto,CaliforniaFinn T.LonginottoMiami Beach,Florida Thomas E.Lovejoy*Fairfax,Virginia
14、Ashok MahbubaniHuntsville,AlabamaJon McCormackLos Altos,CaliforniaKris MooreLos Altos Hills,CaliforniaSeth NeimanSan Francisco,CaliforniaPhilip OConnorMissoula,MontanaAustin OReillyAustin,TexasLee PaceNew York,New YorkLee RhodesSeattle,WashingtonNancy Morgan RitterLos Angeles,CaliforniaJeff Rosentha
15、lAustin,TexasMaureen SchaferLas Vegas,NevadaJesse SisgoldLos Angeles,CaliforniaRichard SneiderLos Angeles,CaliforniaWm.Laney ThorntonSan Francisco,CaliforniaKevin VilkinEden,UtahLindsay Feldman WeissertSanta Monica,CaliforniaChristopher WhiteSeattle,WashingtonShannon WongAustin,TexasShailene Woodley
16、Los Angeles,CaliforniaGillian WynnSanta Monica,CaliforniaJuly 1,2020 June 30,2021*DeceasedStory Clark Resor Chief Executive Officer TravelStorysGPS Wilson,Wyoming M.Sanjayan,Ph.D.Chief Executive Officer Conservation International Arlington,Virginia Andres Santo Domingo Kemado Label Group Brooklyn,Ne
17、w YorkJohn Swift Conservationist Los Osos,California Enki Tan,M.D.Executive Chairman Giti Tire Global Trading Pte Ltd Singapore Byron Trott Founder,Chairman and CEO BDT and Company Chicago,Illinois Rob Walton Chairman of the Board(retired)Wal-Mart Stores,Inc.Bentonville,Arkansas David S.Winter Co-Ch
18、ief Executive Officer Standard Industries New York,New York As of November 2021CONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:0800:00:09Over the last two years,a clear consensus has emerged:Securing the health of Earths climate,ecosystems and biodiversity is essential to the survival of a
19、ll people.The world now recognizes that environmental collapse will not only disproportionately affect marginalized people,but touch all communities,all businesses,all consumers,all governments,all voters.And every week brings a new reason for urgency:droughts and floods;fires and superstorms;heatwa
20、ves and cold snaps.Everywhere,weather is becoming more extreme and as cracks emerge in the worlds great ice shelves,we are entering uncharted territory.The climate crisis has arrived,and it has only just begun.In a moment so grave,our work is no longer fringebut our optimism does feel radical.The ta
21、sks ahead of us are herculean,but there are so many reasons for hope.Opportunities to make a difference are all around us,and we have a larger coalition of the willing than ever before.Now,we must determine how to do as much as possible,as quickly as possible.What ecosystems offer our planet and its
22、 people the most benefit?What financial partners can help us scale our efforts rapidly?What communities hold the wisdom we need to secure nature and its life-sustaining bounties?The future of our movement must be inclusive.For too long,the history of conservation was defined by colonialism and callo
23、usness.Many of the worlds most iconic parks and preserves sit atop sacred Indigenous sites,denigrating rich cultures and undercutting the extraordinary contributions these communities have to offer.This cannot continue.Conservation organizations must transform themselves and allow themselves to be t
24、ransformed.This is not only the right thing to doits the only way we can accumulate the knowledge and vision required to surmount the obstacles that lie ahead.I have been a part of Conservation International since its inception in 1987.Our intentions have always been good.But we have not always been
25、 attentive to unintended consequences.That has changed.We are reckoning with the whole of our legacyboth the positive and negativeto ensure that wherever we go from here,we go in the right way,with the right partners,guided by compassion,respect,and a commitment to listening and learning.We must be
26、an unyielding ally to all those who share the belief that Earth must thrive for humanity to thrive.That is the only path forward.Thank you for walking it with us.PETER SELIGMANNChairman of the BoardDear friends,For decades,Conservation International was swimming against the current.As various crises
27、 came and went,our cause was often relegated to the margins.Nature was considered a“nice-to-have,”and conservation an elitist exercise the dominion of wayfarers,royals and sportsmen.That is no longer the case.NIA TEROCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:1000:00:11These lessons a
28、re not lost on us.We know the coming decade will be a marked departure from the past.Beyond the obvious effects of COVID-19,trends in nationalism,technology and climate will render many current operating models obsolete.Conservation will not be spared.To succeed,we must adapt.Our transformation is w
29、ell underway.We had a remarkable year at Conservation Internationalone that would have felt impossible even a few years ago.In virtually every facet of our workpartnerships and philanthropy,field and finance,science and sus-tainable livelihoodswe exceeded the benchmarks we set.In the few areas impac
30、ted by the pandemic,we are already catching up.In the following pages,you will find an overview of this years accom-plishments,including major advances in climate finance,translational science and planet-positive economies.Underpinning all this progress is a renewed focus on how we do our work.I wan
31、t to highlight two qualities that will define our future.The first is compassion.The last two years have offered a window into the unique burdens that every person bears,both inside and outside the workplace.As a society,we have collectively re-discovered the transformative power of empathyand learn
32、ed how to better care for one another in a fragile,fragmented world.In this spirit,we are investing heavily in our organizational culture,to ensure that cohesion and compassion are an immutable part of our day-to-day workand moral anchors that ground us through periods of change.In practice,this has
33、 meant training our entire staff in compassion-based ethics,deepening our partnerships with Indigenous peoples and local communities,and strengthening our practices so that we continue to be an equitable place to work.The second value is creativity.Uncertainty has become a permanent part of modern l
34、iving,and business-as-usual will not be sufficient to confront the historic challenges before us.With help from our partners at IDEO,we have embraced the tenets of design thinking,a human-centric approach to management.This practice will help us future-proof the systems propelling us toward our goal
35、sand ensure that we can remain nimble and impactful,no matter the circumstances.For more than three decades,Conservation International has continu-ously evolved to meet big challenges and operate in unfamiliar worlds.The coming years will be no exception.Adaptation is in our DNA.I am confident that
36、with our dynamic team and the support of our amazing community,we,like the salmon,will not just survive but succeed in this turbulent new world.DR.M.SANJAYANChief Executive Officer GEORGINA GOODWINDear friends,Salmon are remarkable fish.They spend their formative years in clear freshwater streams,an
37、d then,in the span of a few months,transform for a new life in the ocean.Their morphology,physiology and behavior all changeand the darting speckled fish becomes a silver torpedo able to master a new saltwater realm.Nature is full of organisms that can evolve,and adapt,to thrive in turbulent times.C
38、ONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:1200:00:13LIBERIAKENYAMADAGASCARBOTSWANASOUTH AFRICAAUSTRALIAINDONESIACAMBODIASINGAPOREEUROPE(BELGIUM)PHILIPPINESTIMOR-LESTENEW CALEDONIAFIJISAMOAHAWAI IJAPANCHINANEW CALEDONIAFIJISAMOAHAWAI IUNITED STATESMEXICOCOSTA RICAECUADORPERUBOLIVIACOLO
39、MBIABRAZILGUYANASURINAMENEW ZEALAND(AOTEAROA)The marine boundaries referenced in this map are sourced from Marine Regions and the land international boundaries are sourced from Natural Earth;both are in the public domain.The boundaries and territory/country names used by Conservation International o
40、r by Conservation Internationals partner organizations and contributors on this map do not imply endorsement or acceptance by Conservation International of those boundaries or country names.COUNTRY PROGRAM*INVESTMENT COUNTRY*200 Nautical Mile Limit (UN Convention)N/AABNJ*Land*has a Conservation Inte
41、rnational Office and contains one or more projects that receive Conservation International financial supportcontains one or more projects that receive Conservation International financial supportareas beyond national jurisdictionCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:1400:00:15WHE
42、RE WE WORKStarting with our first project in Bolivia more than 30 years ago,Conservation International has helped support 1,200 protected areas across 77 countries,protecting more than 601 million hectares(1.5 billion acres)of land and sea.With offices in 30 countries and projects in more than 100 c
43、ountries,Conservation Internationals reach has never been broader,but our mission remains the same:to protect nature for the benefit of us all.CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL OFFICENATUREFOR CLIMATE01 PAR,BRAZIL,FLAVIO FORNERCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:1600:00:1701:At the UN
44、 climate talks in Glasgow,delegates put nature front and center to confront the climate crisis.02:Conservation International CEO M.Sanjayan joined financial leaders in announcing a pledge to end deforestation by 2025.NATURE TAKES CENTER STAGE“Years from now,the 2021 UN climate talks in Glasgow may w
45、ell be remembered as a turning pointthe point at which the Paris Agreements aspirations finally began to turn into action,”according to Shyla Raghav,vice president of climate change at Conservation International.For perhaps the first time,nature took center stage at the climate talks,thanks to years
46、 of strenuous effortby Conservation International and othersto raise the profile and importance of nature as an essential solution to the global climate crisis.The 2021 climate talks saw unprecedented commitments and attention on nature,including a declaration by nearly 150 countries to end forest l
47、oss by 2030;a pledge by more than 30 financial institutions to eliminate deforestation from their portfolios by 2025;and$1.7 billion in pledges from governments and foundations to support the efforts of Indigenous peoples and local communities in protecting tropical forests.In the second year of a g
48、lobal pandemic,Conservation International pressed ahead to confront climate breakdown,the pivotal challenge of our time.We helped forge a breakthrough at international climate negotiations,which for the first time recognized the central role of nature as a climate solutiona position that we worked t
49、irelessly for years to advance.Our researchers helped to pinpoint the places in nature that humanity must protect.And we worked with corporate partners to funnel millions of dollars toward protecting and restoring forests,perhaps humanitys greatest ally in the climate fight.Here are a few of the hig
50、hlights.010201.GLASGOW,SCOTLAND,CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL/PHOTO BY LINA BARRERA|02.GLASGOW,SCOTLAND,CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL/PHOTO BY STEPHANIE KIMBALLCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:1800:00:192025More than 30 financial institutions pledged to eliminate deforestation fro
51、m their portfolios byNearly 150 countries committed to end forest loss by2030PORTO SEGURO,BAHIA,BRAZIL,FLAVIO FORNERCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:2000:00:21But perhaps most significantly,the talks saw consensus on a matter that had long eluded agreement:global rules for c
52、arbon trading among countries to achieve their climate commitments.For the past six years,Conservation International worked with like-minded governments and partners on securing a deal for these rules(known as Article 6)that will drive increased investment to natural climate solutions and help speed
53、 climate action.Conservation International served as a trusted adviser to several countries and our technical inputs directly shaped the favorable final outcome.As a next step,Conservation International and partners developed aroadmap to guide financial institutions in meeting their pledge to addres
54、s deforestation risk in their portfolios and will be working to gain additional commitments from across the finance sector.0303:“Hear Me While You Can”digital billboards,like this one in Switzerland,brought the sounds of nature to cities around the world.THE ROADMAPPHASE 1MAPPING RISKPHASE 4DISCLOSI
55、NGPHASE 5ELIMINATING DEFORESTATIONPHASE 2SETTING AN EFFECTIVE POLICY AND MANAGING RISKPHASE 3MONITORING AND ENGAGEMENTGOING ABOVE AND BEYONDNATURE AND PEOPLE POSITIVEIt wasnt the only way we ensured that natures voice was heard.During the climate talks,Conservation International partnered with adver
56、tising company Clear Channel to launch the“Hear Me While You Can”campaign,which brought the sounds of nature to the streets of Glasgowand beyond.By scanning codes on digital billboards in 22 countries around the world,passersby were transported to some of natures most majestic soundscapesfrom the da
57、wn chorus of birds on the Philippines highest peak to the haunting calls of Madagascars lemurs.The campaign invited the public to immerse themselves in the many voices of nature and learn more about why we need to protect it.03.SWITZERLAND,CLEAR CHANNEL|DEFORESTATION-FREE FINANCECONSERVATION INTERNA
58、TIONAL00:00:22CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:23“As the climate crisis unfolds,those least responsiblethe Global South,Indigenous peoples and other marginalized communitiesare the ones suffering the most.Thats a profound injustice.Im proud to work with Conservation International to mend humanitys re
59、lationship with Earthand do so in a way that gives voice to frontline communities.Every single person can make a difference on climate,and harnessing that collective power is the only way to protect our shared future.”Sabrina ElbaActress&Model Europe Council&UK Board memberSAMBURU,KENYA,GEORGINA GOO
60、DWINCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:2400:00:25Groundbreaking new research by Conservation International scientists for the first time mapped natures stashes of carbonpinpointing the ecosystems that humanity must protect to avert a climate disaster.Half of Earths“irrecoverab
61、le carbon”defined as carbon that could not be restored by 2050 if emitted into the atmosphereis highly concentrated,on just3.3 percentof Earths land.The carbon in these reserves,mainly peatlands,mangroves and old-growth forests,is equivalent to 15 times the global fossil fuel emissions released in 2
62、020.If emitted due to human activity,this carbon would prevent humanity from limiting global warming to less than 1.5 degrees Celsius(2.7 degrees Fahrenheit),the benchmark for a“safe”climate.THE ECOSYSTEMS THAT HOLD THE KEY TO OUR CLIMATE FUTUREThe majority of Earths irrecoverable carbon is concentr
63、ated in a relatively small land area.From Noon et al.2021.Mapping the irrecoverable carbon in Earths ecosystems.Nature Sustainability.The good news:Nearly quarter of the worlds irrecoverable carbon is already located within protected areas.Even better:Increasing the amount of land under protection i
64、n key areas by just 5.4 percent would keep 75 percent of Earths irrecoverable carbon from being released into the atmosphere.“Protecting a relatively small portion of land can secure the majority of irrecoverable carbon,”said Conservation International scientist Monica Noon,the studys lead author.“M
65、obilizing resources to conserve these areas can have huge returns for the climate,biodiversity and human well-being.”A FRACTION OF EARTHS LAND,OUR CLIMATE FUTUREODZALA NATIONAL PARK,REPUBLIC OF CONGO,ISTOCK.COM/GUENTERGUNICONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:2600:00:2750%0%Perce
66、ntage of Global Land Area30%20%10%25%50%100%75%of the irrecoverable carbon is in 3.3%of the earths land areaTropical&subtropical wetland Salt marsh&seagrassTemperate forestBoreal forestBoreal wetlandTropical&subtropical forestTemperate wetlandBoreal&temperate grasslandMangroveBoreal&temperate peatTr
67、opical&subtropical peatTropical&subtropical grassland50%75%is in 7.5%of land area40%50%0%Percentage of Global Land AreaPercentage of Global Irrecoverable Carbon30%20%10%25%50%100%75%Tropical&subtropical wetland Salt marsh&seagrassTemperate forestBoreal forestBoreal wetlandTropical&subtropical forest
68、Temperate wetlandBoreal&temperate grasslandMangroveBoreal&temperate peatTropical&subtropical peatTropical&subtropical grassland40%Groundbreaking new research by Conservation International scientists for the first time mapped natures stashes of climate-warming carbonpinpointing the ecosystems that hu
69、manity must protect to avert a climate disaster.IRRECOVERABLE CARBON1255075100125+(t/ha)CONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:2800:00:29WHERE EARTHS IRRECOVERABLE CARBON LIESA new way to protect coastal forestsand the massive amounts of climate-warming carbon they storetook root
70、in Colombia,thanks to a project developed by Conservation International and partners.For the first time,scientists have been able to account for not only the carbon that mangroves store in their trunks and leaves,but also the carbon they sequester in their soils,often for millennia.Why does it matte
71、r?Until now,this“blue carbon”hasnt been accurately measuredeffectively shutting mangroves out of carbon markets and excluding them from financing needed to protect them.Conservation Internationals project helps create long-term funding that is expected toconserve and restore mangroves in Cispat,an 1
72、1,000-hectare(27,000-acre)mangrove forest along the South American countrys Caribbean coast.MANGROVESTERRESTRIAL FORESTSMost carbon is stored BELOW GROUNDMost carbon is stored ABOVE GROUND=Carbon SequestrationCarbon StorageMANGROVES VS.TERRESTRIAL FORESTSFor the first time,scientists have been able
73、to account for not only the carbon that mangroves store in their trunks and leaves,but also the carbon they sequester in their soils,often for millennia.With its carbon stores fully calculated,the Cispat forest can now be valued for its climate benefits and included in carbon markets.Not only that:T
74、his critical step also opens a path for other coastal ecosystems around the world to be added to carbon markets.Revenues from the sale of carbon credits will benefit local communities near Cispat,contributing to sustainable livelihoods and compensating landowners for protecting their mangroves.The i
75、ncome will also provide the initial funding needed to develop a sustain-able ecotourism program and other economic activities for those who rely most on the mangrove forests.“The mangrove forest gives us so much.It shelters us from the winds,and provides food and resources,”said Ignacia de la Rosa P
76、rez,a leader of the San Antero community in the Cispat region.“For us,its like a protective mother.Our goal is to conserve it for the future.”ON COLOMBIAS COAST:BLUE CARBONCISPAT,COLOMBIA,DANIEL URIBECONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:31CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:30“At Kering,we have always believ
77、ed that collaboration is integral to ensure positive,lasting change.As a partner,Conservation International lends their expertise and deep understanding of maximizing pathways to ensure positive impacts for both nature and communities.We are dedicated to safeguarding biodiversity and scaling regener
78、ative farming practices along fashions global supply chains and Conservation International has been pivotal in our mission.”Marie-Claire DaveuChief Sustainability OfficerKering,Fashion Pact Founder&PartnerEASTERN CAPE,SOUTH AFRICA,TROND LARSENCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00
79、:3200:00:331 MILLIONmetric tons of carbon dioxide annually from the atmosphereThe Restore Fund aims to remove at leastEquivalent to the greenhouse gas emissions from more than cars200,000 INVESTING IN “CLIMATE-SMART FORESTRYWHAT IS“CLIMATE-SMART FORESTRY”?To stop climate breakdown,we must emit less
80、planet-warming greenhouse gases.But even if the world stopped using fossil fuels tomorrow,we would fail to avert a worst-case climate sce-nario if we did not also reverse the destruction of ecosystems that absorb and store carbon.The protection,management and restoration of forests represents the la
81、rgest cost-effective natural climate solutionbut receives a tiny fraction of all global climate funding.Conservation International has partnered with Apple and Goldman Sachs on a$200 million Improving the management of“working forests”that is,forests that supply wood for lumber,energy,paper and othe
82、r productsopens a significant opportunity for countries to reach their climate and biodiversity targets.Climate-smart forestry practices vary depending on the forest,but they can include blending unharvested natural forests with areas that are commercially harvested,growing trees for longer periods
83、of time between harvests,limiting harvest sizes,removing invasive species and restoring habitats for threatened species.When designed carefully,together with local stakehold-ers,these practices can have measurable and cost-effective impacts to mitigate climate change.01:CI Ventures invested in Komaz
84、a,a sustainable forestry company that works with smallholder tree farmers in Kenya.01“Restore Fund,”which will invest in climate-smart forestry projects to remove carbon from the atmosphere while generating a financial return for investors.The fund aims to remove at least 1 million metric tons of ca
85、rbon dioxide annually from the atmo-sphereequivalent to the greenhouse gas emissions of more than 200,000 carsand show that scaling up investments in forest manage-ment and restoration can be financially viable.01.KENYA,WILL SWANSON FOR KOMAZA|02.CARDAMOM MOUNTAINS,CAMBODIA,JEREMY HOLDENCONSERVATION
86、 INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:3400:00:35OCEAN CONSERVATIONAT SCALE02 TIMOR-LESTE,CRISTINA MITTERMEIER/SEALEGACYCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:3600:00:37ALLIANCE FOR THE OCEANS In 2021,Conservation International and the Pew Charitable Trusts led the launch o
87、f the Blue Nature Alliance,a global partnership to promote ocean conservation at an unprecedented scale.With additional support from the Global Environment Facility,the Minderoo Foundation,and the Rob and Melani Walton Foundation,the alliance is moving the world closer to“30 x30”a worldwide initiati
88、vefor governments to designate 30 percent of Earths land and ocean area as protected areas by the year 2030.Its the origin and engine of life on the planet.It provides billions of people with food.It has already saved humanity by absorbing excess heat from our warming climate.And it is in peril.The
89、ocean will provide for us only as long as we take care of it.To that end,Conservation International made major strides in science and policy to protect our planets most important feature,and the people who depend on it.Here are some highlights.01:In the Seychelles Islands,the Blue Nature Alliance wi
90、ll support local communities conservation priorities.02:The Pacific Island nation of Palau has more marine species than any other area of similar size in the world.020101.SEYCHELLES,LYNN C/SHUTTERSTOCK|02.PALAU,ETHAN DANIELS/SHUTTERSTOCKCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:3800:
91、00:39NEW/UNKNOWN SITEKEYNEWIMPROVEDTHE FOCUS LOCATIONS OF THE BLUE NATURE ALLIANCECONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:4000:00:41SMALL COUNTRY MAKES BIG SPLASH FOR MARINE CONSERVATIONCosta Rica announced it would expand its protected ocean area from 2.7 percent to more than 30 p
92、ercent of its national watersa major leap that puts the Central American country nine years ahead of a global deadline to protect nearly a third of the worlds land and sea.The expanded Cocos Island National Park,off the countrys Pacific coast,will now cover more than 5 million hectares(12.3 million
93、acres)a staggering 26 times larger than its previous size.In addition,Costa Ricas Bicentennial Sea-mounts Marine Management Area will expand to 11 times its previous size,now encompassing more than 100,000 square kilometers(38,600 square miles)roughly equivalent to the size of Iceland.Conservation I
94、nternational worked closely with the Costa Rican government,local partners and communities to complete environmental surveys,consultation processes,and technical and policy work that helped make this designation a reality.“At a time when it is critical to protect nature to avoid a biodiversity crisi
95、s,we are excited that over the past four years this collaboration has led to expanded marine protections that will benefit livelihoods and nature beyond our country,”said Ana Gloria Guzmn,executive director of Conservation Internationals Costa Rica program.Costa Rica announced it would expand its pr
96、otected ocean area from to more than 2.730%01:Off Costa Ricas Pacific coast,the Cocos Island National Park provides a habitat for endangered sharks,sea turtles and marine mammals.02:A Conservation International-led study found that climate change could trigger massive economic losses for Pacific isl
97、ands that rely on the tuna industry.0102TUNA MIGRATIONS A CLIMATE JUSTICE PROBLEM,STUDY FINDSOut of sight,a growing climate justice issue threatens to upend the industry around the worlds most consumed fish.It has long been known that climate change is forcing Pacific tuna to migrate into open seas
98、in search of warmer waters,and away from the Pacific islands that depend on them.What was not known was just how bad this growing problem could be.Last year,a team of expertsled by Conservation International scientist Johann Bellfound that an exodus of tuna could cut the average catch by 20 percent
99、in the territorial waters of 10 Pacific Island states.According to Bells research,published in the high-profile journal Nature Sustainability,such a reduction in catch could result in losses of$140 million per year by 2050.Tuna-dependent island nations and territoriesalready facing a precarious futu
100、re due to sea-level risewould lose up to 17 percent of their annual revenue from the loss of fishing fees.Meanwhile,unregulated and unsustainable fishing on open seas could severely dent tuna populations that provide a critical source of food the world over.To address this,Conservation International
101、 is planning a large-scale,seven-year initiative with 14 Pacific Island countries to secure the benefits that tuna provides to Pacific communities and protect the critical ecosystems that support tuna populations.01.COSTA RICA,CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL/PHOTO BY MARCO QUESADA ALPZAR|02.SPRINGER NATU
102、RE/NATURE SUSTAINABILITYCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:4200:00:432050Such a reduction in catch could result in losses of$140 million per year by An exodus of tuna could cut the average catch by a staggering in the territorial waters of 10 Pacific Island states.20%AUSTRALIA
103、,ISTOCK.COM/NUTURECONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:4400:00:45WOMEN IN THE SEAFOOD INDUSTRYThe fishing industry is facing a reckoning,with forced labor,child labor and human trafficking on fishing vessels having spurred a global push to address human rights abuses on the high
104、 seas.However,what happens after the fish are caught has remained largely hidden.A Conservation International study last year helped shine a light on the millions of onshore fish workerspredominantly womenwho spend long hours cleaning and packaging fish in factories,maintaining community fish farms
105、and often filling low-paying or informal positions throughout seafood supply chains around the world.In these roles,women face a different but equally egregiousset of human rights abuses,the researchers write.Governments and companies alike must take responsibility to change,says Conservation Intern
106、ational scientist Elena Finkbeiner,the studys lead author.Fortunately,policy frameworks developed in recent years by Conservation Internationalare already providing a roadmap to a more equitable future for the industry.SOCIAL EQUITY IN MARINE CONSERVATIONMarine conservation will not be effective or
107、durable unless it includes the full participation of the communities whose lives and livelihoods depend directly on the oceans.Through the Blue Nature Alliance,Conservation International is incorporating social equity as a core value that informs our work around the world.To help provide a foundatio
108、n for this effort,a new paper published last yearwith seven Conservation International staff contributing explores these issues and calls for steps for improving social equity in ocean conservation efforts.This research reviews how justice,equity,diversity and inclusion can be better integrated in m
109、arine conservation policy and practice,a significant resourcefor the field.CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL IN THE WHITE HOUSEIn 2022,Conservation Internationals oceans lead,Senior Vice President Aulani Wilhelm,took on a temporary,one-year role with the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy(
110、OSTP)as Assistant Director for OceanConservation,ClimateandEquity.In this role,Wilhelm will assume responsibility in OSTPsClimate and Environment Division for science,technology,and policy considerations around the ocean;fisheries;interactions between human,natural,and technological systems;and equi
111、ty and inclusion efforts.She will also help lead interagency discussions across the federal government,engaging broad setsof stakeholders and technical experts on these topics.This appointment is a testament to Wilhelms expertise and experience,and a signal that Conservation Internationals approach
112、to marine conservation is one worth following.0101:Women fill 90 percent of land-based jobs at fisheries,including cleaning,processing and packagingbut often face systemic discrimination.JEMBRANA,BALI,INDONESIA,CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL INDONESIA/PHOTO BY ARY PRATIWICONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSER
113、VATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:4600:00:47“We feel a deep and enduring connection to the Surf Conservation Partnership and its mission to protect precious marine and coastal areas.Engaging with this initiative so intimately financially,intellectually and emotionally has been one of the greatest joys of ou
114、r lives.We are proud to be founding partners of this inspiring movement.”Shannon&Bryce SkaffFounding Partners of The Surf Conservation PartnershipINDONESIA,ISTOCK.COM/FREIE-KREATIONCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:4800:00:49PLANET-POSITIVE ECONOMIES03 CHYULU HILLS,KENYA,AMI
115、VITALECONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:51CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:50Can people and nature thrive together?This question is at the core of our work creating self-sustaining conservation models that can be adapted from one region to another.Conservation International is proving that a better fut
116、ure is possible through our work on“planet-positive economies”that put nature at the center of economic development.Here are some of our highlights from the past year.CHARTING A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE Liberia is rich in abundant and irreplaceable nature,with some of the last intact forest strongholds in
117、 West Africa.The countrys ecosystems provide food and incomes for a whopping 70 percent of its citizens,as well as habitat for critically endangered species such as the western chimpanzee and African forest elephant.However,as Liberiaseconomy has grown,experts have warnedthat these ecosystems could
118、become victims of unsustainable oil palm development,urbanization and logging.To help Liberia ensure that its economic growth remains sustainable,Conservation International and NASA helped the government map where valuable ecosystems are located,how they have changed over time and what critical serv
119、ices they provide to people.The results have enabled the government to determine the true extent of Liberias forests,mangroves and freshwater ecosystems,and the essential services they provide to livelihoods and long-term economic resilience.The next step:for decision-makers to use these maps to pro
120、mote the value of nature in Liberia when planning the countrys economic development.01:In Liberias coastal villages,fisheries provide a vital source of income and protein.Conservation International is working with the government to account for the economic value of nature.02:East Nimba Nature Reserv
121、e,Liberia.020101.LIBERIA,MICHAEL CHRISTOPHER BROWN|02.LIBERIA,CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL/PHOTO BY BAILEY EVANSCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:5200:00:53goal,an initiative to protect 30%of land and sea by30 x302030Our approach to creating seascapes can support the global A u
122、nique approach pioneered by Conservation International is helping countries balance protection and production for the marine eco-systems they depend on.Our seascape approach aims to connect marine protected areas within a broader system of sustainable ocean management.Seascapes are typically large,m
123、ultiple-use marine areas of ocean and coastal habitats with similar characteristics such as thriving biodiversity,vibrant ecotourism and sustainable fishing practices.Sifting through15 years of data and conducting surveys across five of Conservation Internationals seascapes one in Brazil,two in Sout
124、heast Asia OUR“SEASCAPES”MODEL WORKS,RESEARCH SHOWSand two in the Pacificresearchers identified best practices for establishing and maintaining them.This research affirms that successful seascapes rely on traditional knowledge from Indigenous peoples;they are supported by governments at all levels;a
125、nd they incorporate methods for monitoring the social impacts of conservation efforts.We are using lessons learned from this analysis to design five new emerging seascapes.Not only can these lessons drive the creation of future seascapes,they are also supporting movement toward the global“30 x30”goa
126、l,an initiative to protect 30 percent of land and 30 percent of sea by 2030.01:The Abrolhos Marine National Park in Brazil is home to a diverse coral reef system,but overfishing and devel-opment have put the area at risk.01ABROLHOS,BRAZIL,LUCIANO CANDISANI/ILCPCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:54CONSE
127、RVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:55A NEW HAVEN IN THE HIGHLANDSA small community in the Bolivian Andes is making a huge impact on one the most unique and biodiverse ecosystems in the world.With support from Conservation International,the municipality of Guanay passed a law to conserve a huge swath of pris
128、tine cloud forests and vast grasslands blanketing the western slopes of these green highlands.The protected landscapes span an area nearly twice the size of Singapore and are home to vibrant wildlife,from spectacled bearsSouth Americas only native bear speciesto Peruvian dwarf deer.The area will als
129、o protect one of the only known populations of Oreobates zongoensisthe so-called“devil-eyed”frog,which was thought to be extinct until it wasrediscovered on a recent Conservation International expeditionin Bolivia.By choosing to protect a large part of its land,Guanay has set an example for other mu
130、nicipalities in Bolivia and across South America,spreading the message that conservation at the local level can have a big impact on protecting nature.01:San Juan de Challana,in Guanay municipality,Bolivia.The municipality recently expanded a protected area in these Andean highlands.02:The“devil-eye
131、d”frog,previously known only from a single individual observed more than 20 years ago in the Zongo Valley,Bolivia,was recently rediscovered.03:Spectacled bears inhabit the Guanay Protected Area.01020301.GUANAY MUNICIPALITY,BOLIVIA,JUAN PABLO URIOSTE|02.BOLIVIA,STEFFEN REICHLE|03.GUANAY MUNICIPALITY,
132、BOLIVIA,ALVARO MONTESCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:5600:00:57“Its an immense honor to work with the Conservation South Africa team,a group of dedicated and talented professionals committed to securing healthy ecosystems to increase food security,build resilience to climat
133、e change and foster sustainable economic development.It is in the interest of all of us business leaders,governments and NGOs to work together to positively link economic growth,transformation,poverty alleviation,the environment and climate change.”Simon SusmanChairConservation South Africa Board of
134、 Directors BUSHBUCKRIDGE,SOUTH AFRICA,TROND LARSENCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:5800:00:59INNOVATIONS IN SCIENCE AND FINANCE04 INDONESIA,SHAWN HEINRICHSCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:6000:00:61Conservation Internationals work rests on a foundati
135、on of policy-relevant science and innovative financing.Last year,we made major strides in both.Here are a few highlights.WHERE DO PEOPLE DEPEND ON NATURE THE MOST?More than 2.7 billion people in the tropics directly rely on nature in their daily lives,according to a study led by Conservation Interna
136、tional.Knowing where nature-dependent people live can help governments and decision-makers implement stronger conservation efforts based on the resources these communities rely on the most.At its core,the study spotlights an issue of justice:Nature-dependent communities are typically left out of dec
137、isions involving their lands and contribute the least to global greenhouse gas emissions,yet they feel the most severe impacts when nature is degraded.0101:Fishers in Timor-Leste.02:Harvesting bean leaves in Rwanda.Billions of people depend directly on nature for their food and incomes.0201.TIMOR-LE
138、STE,CRISTINA MITTERMEIER/SEALEGACY|02.RWANDA,BENJAMIN DRUMMONDCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:6200:00:63MOST OF THE POPULATION IS HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON NATUREAreas around the world where the majority of people are highly nature-dependentCHAD3BURUNDI1DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE
139、 CONGO2RWANDA4CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC5Here are the top five areas around the world where the majority of people are highly nature-dependent:70 PERCENT of people in the tropics depend on nature for at least one basic need4 needs 3 needs 2 needs1 needpeople in the tropics,or 70 percent,depend on natu
140、re for at least one basic need.Around 1.2 billion people in the tropics,or 30 percent,are highly dependent on nature for at least three basic needs.2.7 BILLION MOST PEOPLE WHO DEPEND ON NATURE IN THE TROPICS DO SO FOR ENERGY SOURCESfollowed by occupation,housing materials and water.2.1 B1.5 B1.4 B84
141、0 MIN 28 COUNTRIES,CONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:6400:00:65“It has been a privilege for Ponant to partner with Conservation International to protect precious ocean habitats,support ridge-to-reef conservation in New Caledonia and propel forward critical scientific research
142、.We have the utmost confidence in the organization,in particular its emphasis on innovation,and look forward to achieving great things together.”Wassim DaoudGeneral SecretaryPonant FoundationMONT PANI,NEW CALEDONIA,SHAWN HEINRICHSCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:6600:00:67NA
143、TURE HAS SAVED US FROM CLIMATE CATACLYSMFOR NOWThe climate crisis would be even worse if nature were not sopping up much of our carbon emissions,a ConservationInternationalstudy found.Currently,Earths complex web of terrestrial and marine ecosystemsknown as the biosphereabsorbs and stores abouthalf
144、of our annual global carbon emissions.That wont last,though.“The biospheres natural balance is slowly succumbing to human pressures and climate change impacts,”said Conservation International chief scientist Johan Rockstrm.“Humanity needs to act now to restore and protect the vast ecosystems that ab
145、sorb half our carbon emissions each year.”Nearly1 million species face extinction.Now,a new tool developed by Conservation International and partners can spotlight the areas and species most at riskand help to guide efforts to protect them.The Species Threat Abatement and Restoration(STAR)metric use
146、s data from the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species to identify what types of human activities are most harmful to wildlife and where.It showsanywhere on Earththe role that humans play in driving species to extinction and provides a measure of whether ongoing human activities are likely to drive any
147、 given species closer to extinction,or whether nature-positive practices can actually reduce its extinction risk.The metric is a vital tool for helping companies,governments and other stakeholders to implement changes to protect wildlife.NEW TOOL TO BRING SPECIES BACK FROM THE BRINKNearlyspecies are
148、 facing extinction.1 MILLION0101:Leopard,Kruger National Park,South Africa.A new tool aims to prevent vulnera-ble and endangered species from reaching extinction.SOUTH AFRICA,MEGAN SEMANCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:6800:00:69“The unifying principle for all our commitment
149、s and investments is enhancing human dignity.That starts with the health of the planet we call home.Conservation International has always put people at the center of their efforts to protect and restore nature.From investing in impactful social enterprises,to creating a culture that values diversity
150、,equity and inclusion,Conservation International helps us fulfill our purpose.Were counting on a lasting and productive partnership.”Ashok&Amrita MahbubaniCo-Founders,The EKTA FoundationLeadership Council memberUGANDA,BENJAMIN DRUMMONDCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:7000:00
151、:71CONSERVATION FINANCE WINS AND GROWSCompanies are increasingly taking on environ-mental challengesbut for many small and medium start-ups,financing is hard to come by.CI Ventures,our investment fund,is filling that gap by providing funding for businesses that contribute to healthy ecosystems.In 20
152、21,Environmental Finance named CI Ventures“Small Asset Manager of the Year”in its annual Impact Awards,which recognize the work of impact investors and highlight best practices.Conservation Internationals African Conservan-cies Fund also won in the“Impact Initiative of the Year-Africa”category for i
153、ts work to deliver loans to the Maasai Mara Conservancies in Ken-ya,which were impacted by the loss of tourism revenues during the pandemic.In the past year,CI Ventures and its co-financing partners disbursed more than$8 million to companies,adding several new businesses to its investment portfolio
154、including:Blue Ocean Gear,a tech company that designs“smart buoys”to help fishers keep track of their equipment and reduce the impacts of lost gear on marine life.Imlakesh Organics,a natural snack food company that partners with small-scale farmers in Latin America to source fruits and nuts from for
155、ests and certified-regenerative agroforestry systems.FlyWire Cameras,which enhances transparency and traceability in the seafood supply chain through at-sea electronic monitoring solutions.Meat Naturally Pty,a for-profit social enterprise in South Africa established by Conservation International tha
156、t supports environmentally friendly livestock grazing among rural communities while increasing their access to markets.Sway,which designs seaweed-based bioplastic packaging materials as a compostable alternative to petroleum-based plastics.By 2028,CI Ventures aims to invest$25 million in 100 deals,l
157、eading to the sustainable management of 500,000 hectares(1.2 million acres)of land and sea,and supporting the livelihoods of 60,000 people.CI Ventures aims to invest$25 million in 100 deals,leading to the sustainable management of2028By500,00060,000hectares(1.2 million acres)of land and sea,and supp
158、orting the livelihoods of people.CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:72CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:73DRIVING INVESTMENTS IN NATURECANADA PENSION PLAN INVESTMENT BOARDNatural climate solutionslike protecting old-growth forests,mangroves,peatlands and other high-carbon ecosystems receiveless than 3 pe
159、rcentof all global climate funding and yet they can get us a third of the way to avoiding a climate crisis.This year,Conservation International partnered with the Canada Pension Plan Invest-ment Board to support nature-based solutions in the voluntary carbon market.CPP Investments will commit$20 mil
160、lion and Conservation International will commit$500,000 to projects in Brazil,Chile,Peru and Colombia that prevent carbon emissions caused by deforestation and support local economies.The partnerships first carbon credit project in Perus Amarakaeri Communal Reserve is estimated to last 30 years and
161、yield annual emissions reductions equivalent to taking 75,000 passenger cars off the road each year.Projects will be certified by a longstanding United Nations-backed program known as REDD+,which offers financial incentives for communities,regions and countries to keep forests intact.PRICELESS PLANE
162、T COALITIONThe Priceless Planet Coalition launched by Mastercard with Conservation International and the World Resources Institute as restoration partnersis helping to restore some of Earths most vulnerable forests,with the goal of planting 100 million trees by 2025.Were targeting deforested ecosyst
163、ems that could have an enormous impact on climate,wildlife and communities livelihoods if restored.This includes carbon-rich rainforests in Brazil,which are being destroyed faster than at any other point in the last decade;areas in New South Wales,Australia,where bushfires in 2020 scorched more than
164、 18 million hectares(44 million acres)of land and affected more than 3 billion animals;and degrad-ed lands in the Makuli-Nzaui landscape in Kenya that are essential for water and food security in the region.Guided by Conservation International,the coalition is using science-based best practices for
165、the selection,implementation and long-term monitoring of its restoration efforts.010201:Keeping forests like these standing in Tapajs National Forest,Brazil,can help curb climate change.02:The Southern Tablelands of Australia face an increased threat of wildfires.01.FLORESTA NACIONAL DO TAPAJS,PAR,B
166、RAZIL,FLAVIO FORNER|02.AUSTRALIA,AEROMETREXCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:7400:00:75By2025100 MILLION TREESThe Priceless Planet Coalition a partnership of Conservation International,Mastercard and the World Resources Instituteis helping to restore some of Earths most vulne
167、rable forests,with the goal of plantingSANTARM,PAR,BRAZIL,FLAVIO FORNERCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:7600:00:77The second year of a global pandemic brought numerous challenges to conservation organi-zations.It also brought opportunities to show policymakers the links betw
168、een nature and virus outbreaksand how to adapt to them,and prevent them from happening in the first place.Here are a few highlights.PROTECT NATURE OR RISK FUTURE PANDEMICS“Human health cannot be separated from the health of the planet,”warns Conservation Internationals new pandemic prevention fellow
169、,Dr.Neil Vora.Hes right.Though every new infectious disease is unique,research shows many share a key feature:They are driven by the destruction of nature.Since the 1940s,the number of new infectious diseases has increasedand most of them have originated from animals.These numbers are expected to ri
170、se even further in the coming decade if we continue to degrade nature.As humans continue to clear forests and the global wildlife trade persists,there are more opportunities for diseases to spread from animals to humansa process known as“spillover.”Dr.Vora,a physician and epidemiologist,has devoted
171、his career to chasing infectious diseases.In his first year as a fellow at Conservation International,hes working to expose the links between human health and the health of the planetand why humanity must protect tropical forests and halt unsafe wildlife trade to prevent another global pandemic.COVI
172、D RECOVERY COMES AT NATURES EXPENSE,STUDY FINDSDespite warnings that nature must be protected to prevent future disease outbreaks,more countries undermined rather than supported nature in decisions made after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic,Conservation International researchers found.Our study r
173、evealed that 22 countriesincluding most of the worlds major economiesproposed or advanced decisions to roll back or weaken environmental protections,limit the expansion of conserved areas,or reduce budgets for man-agement of those areas during the pandemic.Researchers also identified dozens of envir
174、on-mental rollbacks around the world,many of them directly affecting the rights of Indigenous peoples who live on or near conserved land.As the world moves forward from the pandemic,Conservation International is working to turn the tide of legal rollbacks to conservation areas,to rebuild economies i
175、n a way that values nature and those who depend on it.0201 01:A local Maasai guide enters the cloud forests atop Chyulu Hills in southeastern Kenya.As tourism struggled during the pandemic,carbon credits offered a lifeline.02:Experts warn that the disrup-tion of natural ecosystems through deforestat
176、ion could contribute to future viral outbreaks.CONSERVATION AND COVID01.CHYULU HILLS,KENYA,CHARLIE SHOEMAKER|02.FLORESTA NACIONAL DO TAPAJS,PAR,BRAZIL,FLAVIO FORNERCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:79CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:78As COVID-19 lockdowns and travel restrictions cratered ecotourism in
177、 Africa,the people of Chyulu Hills in southeast Kenyasaid to be the inspiration for Ernest Hemingways“Green Hills of Africa”were able to tell a different story.A forest carbon project in the Chyulu Hills,supported by Conservation International,offers financial incentives for communities,regions and
178、countries to keep forests intact and prevent climate-warming carbon emissions caused by deforestation.Revenues for the project come from the sale ofcarbon credits,which represent a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions that countries,companies or individuals can purchase to compensate for emissions
179、made somewhere else.This steady stream of income from the sale of carbon creditsboth before and during the pandemichas been“transformational”for local communities in the area,including Indigenous Maasai pastoralists and Kamba agricultural-ists,who have helped conserve and restore 404,000 hectares(1
180、million acres)of land.WHEN COVID FLATTENED TOURISM,CARBON CREDITS KEPT THESE AFRICAN HILLS GREENIndigenous Maasai pastoralists and Kamba agriculturalists have helped conserve and restorehectares(1 million acres)of land404,000Across Peru,the COVID-19 pandemic left millions without jobsbattering the e
181、conomy,draining public coffers and buffeting high-grossing industries,from mining to tourism.But in the Alto Mayo Protected Forest,where the Amazon meets the Andes,coffee farmers were spared much of the economic devastation that gripped Perus cities and towns.Conservation International has long led
182、efforts to implement financial incentives for coffee farmers in the region.Through conservation agreements,communities in the protected forest can receive benefits such as agricultural training and access to specialty-grade markets for the coffee they grow.In exchange,the farmers commit to maintain
183、the forests on their lands.During the pandemic,funds from the project provided a lifeline for the families who live in the forest:Farmers in Alto Mayo had a banner year in 2020,exporting 336 tons of organic and fair-trade coffee to Europe,New Zealand and the United Statesone-third more than the prev
184、ious year.DESPITE PANDEMIC,THIS REGION THRIVED ON COFFEE,CARBON020301:Local communities are making significant progress in restoring the verdant,rolling mountains of Kenyas iconic Chyulu Hills region through the sale of carbon credits.02:Local farmers in the Alto Mayo Protected Forest exported 336 t
185、ons of organic and fair-trade coffee in 2020,despite the pandemic.03:Agricultural trainings sponsored by Conservation International are helping farmers in Peru boost their coffee yieldsincreasing their productivity,not their environmental impact.0101.CHYULU HILLS,KENYA,CHARLIE SHOEMAKER|02.ALTO MAYO
186、,PERU,ALEX BRYCE|03.ALTO MAYO,PERU,ADRIN PORTUGALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:8000:00:81“Conservation Internationals ability to deliver results,especially amid the challenges and uncertainties presented by the pandemic,continues to impress me.It is my pleasure to work wi
187、th Conservation Internationals Asia-Pacific division to support their efforts in environmental education and landscape restoration,and expect that their dedication will make a difference for people and nature for generations to come.”Madhur and Mohit KhuranaESG Director and Chief Investment OfficerS
188、outhern Ridges Capital MONT PANI,NEW CALEDONIA,SHAWN HEINRICHSCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:83CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:82 Conservation Internationals origins provide a strong foundation for our commitment to diver-sity,equity and inclusion.More than 35 years ago,our now Chairman Peter Selig
189、mann and his Co-Founder Spencer Beebe envisioned a novel approach to large-scale environmental protection that placed local communities at the heart of conservation efforts.As a member of the Kikuyu tribe of Central Kenya,I know the importance of an origin story.For my people,its a connection to the
190、 past that gives shape to our traditions and beliefs thats why having a deep connection to Conservation Internationals beginnings helps us build an even stronger culture of diversity,equity and inclusion.Our roots have informed all that weve done for more than three decades,including being one of th
191、e first environmental organizations to develop a policy for partnering with Indigenous peo-ples an initiative that evolved into our rights-based approach to conservation;supporting women to participate fully in community discussions and management decisions;and rolling out new systems to better addr
192、ess project impacts on people and the environment.We elevated the principles of diversity,equity and inclusion into our top organizational priorities last year,and we now measure our progress toward greater workforce diversity,workplace inclusion,inclusive conservation and leadership accountability.
193、We are also working to promote inclusion and equity among our vast network of peer groups and partners across the conservation world;for example,we partnered with MIT and local leaders to establish the Afro-InterAmerican Forum on Climate Change to illuminate the unique climate and environmental chal
194、lenges Afro-descendant communities face in the Americas and to promote their expertise in climate change decision-making.Ensuring that our diverse,equitable and inclusive approach is comprehensive and durable will,of course,take time,humility and a lot of hard work.By building on our roots,Im confid
195、ent thatwe will continue to bring these values to life,and I am proud to lead this work.Wanjiru Gathira senior director,global equity,diversity and inclusion OUR COMMITMENT TO DIVERSITY,EQUITY AND INCLUSIONIndigenous women from Amazonia gathered for a historic summit this year,uplifting their unique
196、 and essential role in conserving the worlds most iconic forest.COLOMBIA,MEMENTO PHOTO STUDIOSCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:84CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:85WHATS NEXT05CHOBE NATIONAL PARK,BOTSWANA,PAUL SOUDERS/GETTY IMAGESCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:8600:00:87Here
197、 are just a few of the projects well be working on in the coming year to protect nature for the benefit of us all.BEZOS EARTH FUND GRANTThe Amazon is the ecological jewel of the worldand its hurtling toward disaster.As vast tracts of Amazonia are lost to deforestation and wildfire,the region is appr
198、oaching a tipping point:Creeping desertification risks the forests ability to regulate rainfall,maintain biodiversity,sequester carbon and support millions of Indigenous peoples.Last year,Conservation International was awarded$20 million from the Bezos Earth Fund to expand its work in Amazonia along
199、side Indigenous peoples,local communities and partner organizations.The gift to Conservation International is part of a$151 million,multi-organization effort to support conservation in the tropical Andes.By 2024,across Bolivia,Colombia,Ecuador and Peru,Conservation International will support the cre
200、ation of more than 10,000 square kilometers(3,800 square miles)of newly conserved areas,improve management of more than 81,000 square kilometers(31,000 square miles)and bolster the livelihoods of more than 60,000 people.We will work in direct partnership with Indigenous peoples and local communities
201、,supporting their leadership and strengthening their land rights,while designing sustainable financing mechanisms that deliver long-lasting impacts for the region.01:A fisherman watches the sun rise above the trees in the Pampas region of Bolivia.02:Conservation International is helping farmers with
202、in Perus Alto Mayo Protected Forest sustainably and responsibly plant lucrative crops,including cacao.020101.BOLIVIA,JONATHAN HOOD/FLICKR CREATIVE COMMONS|02.ALTO MAYO,PERU,CI PERU/MARLON DEL GUILACONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:8800:00:892024 10,00081,000Across Bolivia,Col
203、ombia,Ecuador and Peru,Conservation International will support the creation of more thansquare kilometers(3,800 square miles)of newly conserved areas,improve management of more thansquare kilometers(31,000 square miles)and bolster the livelihoods of more than 60,000 people.ByECUADOR,DR MORLEY READCO
204、NSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:90CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:91The vast,dry rangelands of southern Africa are rich in biodiversity,critical for livelihoods and food security and vulnerable to the effects of overgrazing and climate change.With funding from France and the European Union,Conservatio
205、n International will restore and conserve 10,000 square kilometers(3,800 square miles)of these habitats,directly benefiting 30,000 people in South Africa,Botswana,Zambia and Zimbabwe.The project is based on the Herding for Health model,an incentive-based conservation approach initiated by Conservati
206、on International and Peace Parks Foundation,an African nonprofit,to improve the livelihoods of rural communities living in or around protected areas.At the core of the model is Conservation Internationals“conservation agreements”mechanism,which provides economic and other incentives or ben-efits to
207、communities to improve management of their natural resources.In this project,rural communities will voluntarily commit to implement planned grazing of their livestock to minimize overgrazing,remove invasive vegetation that hamper grass growth and water availability,adopt human-wildlife conflict miti
208、gation practices and adopt sustain-able fisheries practices among other measures identified in consultations with local actors.In turn,they will receive support to improve the quality of their livestock,reduce animal losses from wildlife predators,access facilitated livestock markets and purchase su
209、stainable fishing gear.Moreover,the project will support communities to initiate investable community-based,“nature-friendly”rural enterprises that can deliver environmental and social outcomes.This will include strengthening their partnerships with private sector and impact investors.PROTECTING RAN
210、GELANDS IN SOUTHERN AFRICAWith funding from France and the European Union,Conservation International will restore and conserve10,000square kilometers (3,800 square miles)of rangelands in southern Africa,directly benefiting30,000people in South Africa,Botswana,Zambia and Zimbabwe.01:When livestock ar
211、e kept on the move,they can help restore degraded landscapes by mimicking the mass migrations of native wildlife,such as wildebeests.01SOUTH AFRICA,JACQUES VAN ROOYENCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:9200:00:93SUPPORTING INDIGENOUS WOMENS LEADERSHIPKatty GuatatocaEcuadorGladi
212、s GrefaEcuadorSharmaine ArtistSurinameCecilia MartinezPeruEdina Carlos B.BrazilJosiane TicunaBrazilCaroline JacobsGuyanaIsolina JavaColombiaImmaculata CasimeroGuyanaMarijane MakadepuungSurinameJudith NuntaPeruMara C.BiguidimaColombiaEveylyn GarciaBoliviaElizabeth PeredoBoliviaNelyda EntsakuaPeruAlth
213、ea HardingGuyanaGabriela LoaizaPeruMaria F.ApurinaBrazilAgripina TiburnayPeruSamela Sater-MauBrazilBernice SeratayaBoliviaCamenza Yucuna RivasColombiaEster MarsloweGuyanaLoretta FiedtkouGuyanaGrowing evidence points to better governance and conservation outcomes when fisheries and forests are manage
214、d collaboratively by women and men.Yet in many places,women are frequently denied access to resources,have limited power in decision-making,and their knowledge and ideas are often discounted.Conservation International launched multiple fellowships that will support Indigenous women to take leadershi
215、p roles in conservation,including:THE SUE TAEI OCEAN FELLOWSHIP FOR INDIGENOUS WOMEN OF THE PACIFICThe Sue Taei Ocean Fellowship for Indigenous Women of the Pacific aims to elevate the role of Indigenous women from across the region in ocean conservation.The Fellowshipin honor of the late Sue Taei,f
216、ormerly executive director of Conservation Internationals Pacific Islands programannounced its first two fellows in 2021.Our inaugural fellows,Tepoerau Mai and Te Aomihia Walker,have used their fellowships as launchpads to secure scholarships to further their education and research.Based in New Cale
217、donia,Tepoerau Mai,of Tahitian and Marquesan descent,is conducting research on the risk of toxic and harmful micro-algae to human health.She recently returned from a month in France,where she worked with specialists in toxic micro-algae at Ifremer laboratories,identifying species present in New Cale
218、donia and analyzing the toxins produced by these organisms,and received the Young Talents 2021 LOral-UNESCO award For Women in Science.She has returned to New Caledonia and is continuing her research.Hailing from Aotearoa(New Zealand),Te Aomihia Walker(Ngti Porou)is using her fellowship to attend th
219、e UNESCO-GR Fisheries Training Program in Iceland to develop her understanding of fisheries management,industry and resource economics.She will soon return to New Zealand,where she will work to protect and advance the interests of Mori in the marine environment.THE“OUR FUTURE FORESTS:AMAZONIA VERDE”
220、PROJECTThe“Our Future Forests:Amazonia Verde”project is supporting 24 Indigenous women across seven countries in Amazonia to boost their leadership in conserving their territories,adapting to climate change and strength-ening their communities through ancestral knowledge.This first cohort promotes r
221、esolving challenges related to Indigenous economies,gender balance,climate change mitigation and adaptation,and more,based on their own solutions.The cohort includes BerniceSarataya of BoliviasChiquitanatribe,who plans to create natural pharmacies with a gender-conscious and renewable approach,and I
222、maculata Casimero of theWapichantribe in Guyana,who is advocating for the protection of the main headwaters of the South Rupununi River.“Our Future Forests:Amazonia Verde”is scaling these initiatives internationally through such forums as the IUCN World Conservation Congress and the UN climate talks
223、.CONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:9400:00:95“To celebrate my bar mitzvah,I asked family and friends to donate to Conservation International because I care about animals and our forests&oceans.Having a clean,healthy planet is really important to me.”Felix HellerCOSTA RICA,EVA
224、 TRONG-MONGECONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:9600:00:97FIELD PROGRAMSGRANTMAKING DIVISIONSFUNDRAISINGMANAGEMENT+OPERATIONSOTHER PROGRAMSMOORE CENTER FOR SCIENCE COMMUNICATIONSCENTER FOR SUSTAINABLE LANDS AND WATERSCENTER FOR NATURAL CLIMATE SOLUTIONS44%23%8%7%5%5%3%3%2%EXPEN
225、SESConservation International closed fiscal year 2021 with expenses totaling US$159.4 million.FOUNDATIONS INVESTMENTSPUBLIC FUNDING,NGOS AND MULTILATERALSINDIVIDUALSOTHER INCOMECORPORATIONS34%23%21%10%8%4%REVENUEIn the fiscal year 2021,Conservation International raised a total of US$217.7 million in
226、 revenue from deeply committed supporters from around the globe.CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:98Conservation International supporters and partners know that we need nature.Their tremendous generosity is helping Conservation International protect nature for the future of us all.CONSERVATION INTERNA
227、TIONAL00:00:99REVENUE&EXPENSES34%23%21%10%8%4%REVENUE217.7MUS$44%23%8%7%5%5%3%3%2%EXPENSES159.4MUS$NET ASSETSThanks to several large,multi-year contributions,total Net Assets in fiscal year 2021 increased by$58.5 million,from$322.1 million to$380.6 millionwith most of this increase derived from sour
228、ces that support specific programs or purposes.We are profoundly grateful to our donors for trusting Conservation International to pursue solutions to some of the most critical challenges of our time.FY21 FINANCIAL OVERVIEWREVENUEThanks to our donors generosity,in fiscal year 2021 we increased our r
229、evenues to close at$217.7 milliona 34 percent increase over last years revenues.We received significant,multi-year grants to support our most urgent priorities:forest protection and regeneration,engagement with Indigenous groups,the development of innovative financing mechanisms to support sustainab
230、le businesses,and more.EXPENSESConservation International closed fiscal year 2021 with expenditures totaling$159.4 millionthe second highest level in our history,after a pre-pandemic peak of$160.2 million in fiscal year 2018.Our teams have successfully navigated the constraints imposed by COVID to d
231、eliver quality conservation outcomes while ensuring the health and safety of our staff,partners and beneficiaries.Our field programs and Center for Oceans rep-resented our largest programmatic investments,accounting for$70.2 million,or 44 percent of our total expenses.Our Grantmaking Divisions accou
232、nted for$36.8 million in expenditures,or 23 percent of total expenses.Conservation Internationals Global Programs teamincluding the Moore Center for Science,the Center for Sustainable Lands and Waters,the Center for Natural Climate Solutions,the Center for Communities and Conservation,and the Global
233、 Policy and Government Affairs divisiondelivered outsized impacts by creating enabling conditions,best practices and tools that amplified the impact of other divisions.As Conversation International grows,we will continue to carefully steward each dollar our donors entrust to us.We are mindful of the
234、 need to invest in systems and people to effectively manage a portfolio that is growing both in size and complexity.Supporting service costs rose modestly by 1.9 percent,from$22.9 million in fiscal year 2020 to$23.3 million in fiscal year 2021,compared to a 4.1 percent increase in programmatic spend
235、ing.As a result,our overhead rate fell slightly from 14.9 percent in fiscal year 2020 to 14.6 percent in fiscal year 2021.Despite the ongoing challenges of the pandemic,our staff and partners made significant progress toward our conservation goals in fiscal year 2021,one of Conservation Internationa
236、ls strongest on record.Our audited financial statements reflect revenues of$217.7 million,one of the highest levels reported in our history,against$159.4 million in expenditures.We extend our sincerest thanks to our donors for believing in us and in our workand continuing to support us during these
237、challenging times.GUYANA,PETE OXFORD/ILCPCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:10000:00:101CONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:10200:00:10320212020 WITHOUT DONOR RESTRICTIONWITH DONOR RESTRICTIONTOTALTOTALSUPPORT AND REVENUEGrants+Contributions:Foundations$4
238、,340$69,390$73,730$56,573 Public Funding39 45,733 45,772 36,672 Individuals10,742 10,812 21,554 12,425 Corporations2,274 7,272 9,546 36,309 Other71,1761,1831,316Cancellations and de-obligations(230)(230)(4,250)Contract revenue11,42411,4249,991Other revenue560 3,712 4,272 4,211Investment Income,net4,
239、553 45,848 50,401 9,352 Net Assets Released from Donor Restrictions135,380(135,380)TOTAL SUPPORT AND REVENUE169,319 48,333217,652 162,599EXPENSESProgram Services:Field Programs70,188 70,188 70,270 Grantmaking Divisions36,792 36,792 32,197 Moore Center for Science7,886 7,886 8,016 Communications5,090
240、 5,090 4,984 Center for Sustainable Lands and Waters4,112 4,112 4,192 Center for Natural Climate Solutions3,674 3,674 2,807 Other Programs8,384 8,384 8,250 Total Program Services136,126 136,126 130,716Supporting Services:Management+Operations10,633 10,633 10,816 Fundraising12,626 12,626 12,005 Total
241、 Supporting Services23,259 23,259 22,821 TOTAL EXPENSES 159,385 159,385 153,537CHANGES IN NET ASSETS BEFORENONOPERATING ACTIVITY9,934 48,33358,2679,062NONOPERATING ACTIVITY:(Gain)Loss on translation of affiliate and field office net assets198198(2,203)Loss on translation of grants and pledges receiv
242、able(2)CHANGES IN NET ASSETS9,934 48,53158,4656,857NET ASSETS:Beginning18,139303,987 322,126 315,269 Ending$28,073$352,518$380,591$322,126FY21 STATEMENTOF ACTIVITIESIN MEMORIAMIN MEMORIAMDr.Edward O.WilsonNear the very end of 2021,we said goodbye to Dr.Edward O.Wilson,one of the great naturalists of
243、 the 20th century.Wilson,a former board member at Conservation International,was a profound thinker and foremost entomologist,whose theories on biodiversity and evolution led some to dub him“a modern-day Charles Darwin.”Wilson shared his ideas through a deep and engrossing body of written work that
244、helped to popularize biodiversity,untangle the complex web of nature and convey the protection of the natural world as a moral imperative.His books made him one of the most visible faces in science,inspiring countless future conservationists and earning him two Pulitzer Prizes.“Every conservationist
245、 and ecologist owes their career path in some way to Ed,”reflected Conservation International CEO M.Sanjayan.“His writing reminded us that the world is really magnificent and connected and dripping with life.”At Conservation International,his influence was profound.“He challenged the organization to
246、 focus intensively on protecting the most important biodiversity hotspots,”said Peter Seligmann,founder of Conservation International and Chairman of the Board.That pioneering approach became the organizations guiding blueprint for more than 20 years,helping us make targeted investment in natures mo
247、st important,irreplaceable ecosystems.Until the very end,Wilson was still making major contributions to conservation.At the age of 87,he famously called for devoting 50 percent of the Earths surface to nature to stave off mass extinction.This led,in part,to“30 x 30”an effort supported by Conservatio
248、n International that seeks to preserve 30 percent of the planets lands and waters by the year 2030.We honor and remember Wilson for bonding science to action and telling stories that have inspired and connected us to a larger,guiding truth:We must protect nature for the sake of all life on Earth.Dr.
249、Thomas LovejoyOn Christmas morning 2021,the conservation movement lost one of its giants,Dr.Thomas Lovejoy.Lovejoy was a world-renowned conservation biologist,who spent more than 50 years trying to protect the Amazon rainforest.Known by many as the“godfather of biodiversity,”he coined the term“biolo
250、gical diversity”and was an early proponent that habitat destruction and global warming are profoundly altering our planets ecosystems and their rich abundance of life.Lovejoy was a member of Conservation Internationals Leadership Council and was integral to the organizations earliest successes.In 19
251、84,Lovejoy proposed the“debt-for-nature swap,”in which a portion of a developing countrys foreign debt is forgiven in exchange for commitments to environmental protection and policy measures.Since the firstdebt-for-nature swapbetween Conservation International and Bolivia in 1987,the idea has become
252、 a mainstay of conservation,with billions of dollars in funding being made available for environmental protection.His prolific writing and genial nature won him countless accolades and inspired generations of passionate conservation advocates.His2019 bookco-edited with Conservation International sci
253、entist Lee Hannah,“Biodiversity and Climate Change:Transforming the Biosphere”a sequel to a seminal work released in 2005 by the same authorsis now being used as a teaching text in universities,providing an invaluable foundation for the next generation of scientists and decision-makers.The next gene
254、ration that will carry on his legacy will remember Lovejoy not only for his immense scientific contributions but for his good-natured generosity.“He was a giant in conservation,a champion for the Amazon,and above all a kind and generous scientist.We will miss him greatly,”said Conservation Internati
255、onal CEO M.Sanjayan.01.JOHN BLANDING/THE BOSTON GLOBE VIA GETTY IMAGES|02.JERRY FREILICHCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:10400:00:105SUPPORTERSConservation Internationals network of public and private partners amplifies our work across the globe.CORPORATIONSA+E Networks Japa
256、nAbbVie Employee Matching Gifts ProgramAbly Inc.ADMAdobe Systems Incorporated Matching GifAgropalma S.A.AIG Employee Matching Gifts ProgramAlex Woo,Inc.AllcotAll Nippon AirwaysAlpargatas S.A.A,Inc.American Eagle Outfitters Employee Matching Gifts ProgramAmeriprise Financial Employee Matching Gifts P
257、rogramAppleApple Employee Matching Gifts ProgramAudacyAurelian,Lundin GoldBank of America Corporation Bank of America Employee Giving&Matching Gift ProgramBaobab StudiosBattelles Always GivingBenefit Management Group,Inc.(Workplace)Bergner HomeBHP Group LimitedBlackRock,Inc.Workplace GivingBlank Rom
258、e LLPBloomingdalesBlue Bottle Coffee,Inc.Boies,Schiller&Flexner LLPThe Boston Beer CompanyBP International LimitedBretonBridgewater AssociatesThe Builders Initiative,Inc.Built RoboticsByteDanceChemonics International,Inc.Chevron Employee Matching Gifts ProgramChoate,Hall&Stewart LLPCiscoCitizen Watc
259、hColumbia SportswearConscious StepCorporacin Autnoma Regional de Alto MagdalenaCosta BrazilCounter Culture CoffeeDaikin Industries,Ltd.Development Alternatives,Inc.Disney Worldwide Services,Inc.Distant Imagery SolutionsDLA PiperDuke Energy Employee Matching Gifts ProgramDunkin BrandsDunn&Hobbes,LLCE
260、llis BrooklynEnviro GripEverland Marketing LLCFableticsFLOA BankFluence EnergyFreewill,Inc.FreshpetFried,Frank,Harris,Shriver&Jacobson LLPFrontstreamGates Foundation Workplace GivingGeneral Mills,Inc.GoChainGoogleGoogle Employee Matching Gifts ProgramGoW2Harney&Sons Tea Corp.Home Box OfficeHonda Mot
261、or Co.,Ltd.HP,Inc.IBM Employee Matching Gifts ProgramImpactAssets,Inc.Intel Employee Matching Gifts ProgramInternational Monetary Fund Employee Matching Gifts ProgramJDE PeetsJohnson&Johnson Employee Matching Gifts ProgramJord InternationalJPMorgan Chase&Co.KeringKeurig Dr PepperKPMGLegend Bracelet
262、LLCMars WrigleyMastercardMastercard Workplace GivingMcDonalds CorporationMcWhinneyMerconMicrosoftMicrosoft Employee Matching Gifts ProgramMitsubishi CorporationMitsui&CoMot HennessyMSIG Asia Pte.Ltd.National Financial Services,LLCNetflixNissan Motor CorporationNorthrop Grumman CorporationOmazeOrrick
263、,Herrington&Sutcliffe LLPPenny Newman Grain Co.Perkins Coie LLPPershingPfizer Workplace GivingPineBridge InvestmentsPrivate Company Anonymous Matching Gift Employee WorkplaceThe Proctor&Gamble CompanyProdubancoRazer Inc.Reily FoodsRiboli Family WinesSaks,Inc.SateriSC JohnsonScenic Air SafarisSEFCUTh
264、e Shanghai Commercial&SavingsShearman&SterlingSheppard,Mullin,Richter&Hampton LLPShinryo CorporationSiqueira Castro AdvogadosSony Pictures EntertainmentSouthampton Row Trust LtdSouthern Ridges Capital Pte.LtdSparkasse HanauStandard IndustriesStarbucks Coffee CompanyStarling BankStockholm Resilience
265、Centre(SWEDBIO)T&T Data SolutionsTab for a CauseTiffany&Co.TikTokToyota Boshoku America,Inc.Toyota Motor CorporationTradeweb Markets LLCTurner Broadcasting System,Inc.U.S.Department of AgricultureUCC Europe LtdUCC Holdings Co.LtdUnileverUnited Airlines Inc.UnitedHealth Group Employee Workplace Givin
266、gUnity TechnologiesVanguard Employee Matching Gifts ProgramVHS HoldingWalmart Inc.The Walt Disney CompanyWalton Enterprises Employee Matching Gift ProgramWarner Bros.Entertainment GroupWells Fargo BankWESTbahnWH SmithWhite&Case LLPWorld Bank Employee Workplace GivingZulilyFOUNDATIONSThe Rona and Jef
267、frey Abramson FoundationAdventure Travel Conservation FundAKO FoundationScott and Kathy Aldern Family Giving FundAmerican Endowment FoundationAmericas CharitiesJeffrey R.Anderson Charitable FoundationAndes Amazon FundPaul M.Angell Family FoundationArcus FoundationArkansas Community FoundationArnhold
268、 FoundationAspen Community FoundationBrazil FoundationThe Associated:Jewish Community Federation of BaltimoreAtherton Family FoundationHarry G.and Pauline M.Austin FoundationAyco Charitable FoundationWalt and Elizabeth Bachman Fund of The Minneapolis FoundationBaillie Family FoundationBank of Americ
269、a Charitable Gift FundThe Cecile&Fred Bartman FoundationBenevity Community Impact FundBergen FoundationBHP FoundationThe Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation FundBirdLife InternationalDiane&Kendall Bishop Family Foundation of the California Community FoundationBloomberg PhilanthropiesThe Boston Fo
270、undationBright Funds FoundationCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:10600:00:107Carolyn S.Brody Family FoundationBronfman Hauptman FoundationBuilders VisionMargaret A.Cargill PhilanthropiesHarold K.L.Castle FoundationCaterpillar FoundationCatto Shaw FoundationThe Cedars Foundati
271、on,Inc.The Dorothy Jordan Chadwick FundDonald&Carole Chaiken FoundationCharities Aid FoundationThe Chol Chol FoundationClimate and Land Use AllianceFundacin Coca-ColaThe Ara D.Cohen Charitable Lead TrustColeman Family VenturesCommunity Foundation of New JerseyCommunity Foundation of the OzarksCounte
272、r Inertia Giving FundThe Elizabeth Crook&Marc Lewis FoundationRobert L.Crowell Charitable Fund of the Community Foundation of New JerseyDanem FoundationThe Darwin FoundationDewoskin-Roskin FoundationGeraldine R.Dodge FoundationThe Edward and Rose Donnell FoundationWilliam H.Donner Foundation,Inc.Dye
273、r Family FoundationEcoTrustThe EMWIGA FoundationThe Charles Engelhard FoundationFondation EnsembleErol FoundationFair Share FoundationFidelity CharitableThe Joseph&Marie Field Family Environmental FoundationThe William H.G.Fitzgerald Family FoundationFlackett-Levin Charitable FundFlora Family Founda
274、tionFondo de Especies Invasoras Galpagos-EPIFondo de Especies Invasoras Galpagos-MAGAnn B.&Thomas L.Friedman Family FoundationThe Frost Family FoundationFundo Brasileiro para a BiodiversidadeThe Jane Greenspun Gale and Jeffrey Gale Family TrustThe David E.&Mary C.Gallo FoundationGeneration Foundatio
275、nThe Goldman Environmental FoundationGoldman Sachs GivesGoldman Sachs Philanthropy FundGosnell Foundation Inc.The Greater Cincinnati FoundationGW Cadbury Charitable TrustHaackayama Giving FundThe Marc Haas FoundationHamill Family FoundationJohn&Katie Hansen Family FoundationThe Hart Family Charitabl
276、e FundHarvey Family Charitable FoundationHawaii Community FoundationAnn-Eve Hazen Family FundHead and Heart FoundationThe Henry FoundationJeanne Herbert Fund of the Hawaii Community FoundationHigh Tide FoundationLyda Hill PhilanthropiesThe Hyde Family FoundationItaltile and Ceramic FoundationRaymond
277、 James CharitableThe James Family FoundationJamner Family FoundationJustGivingThe Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell FoundationMike and Laura Kaplan Fund of the Mayer and Morris Kaplan Family FoundationKeidanren Nature Conservation FundKramer Giving FundThe Robert and Kimberly Kravis FoundationDavid M.Leus
278、chen FoundationLiving Springs FoundationLSP Family FoundationYvonne Lui TrustMAC3 Impact PhilanthropiesThe John D.and Catherine T.MacArthur FoundationMargot Marsh Biodiversity FoundationThe Martin Family Charitable FoundationMAVA Fondation pour la NatureMimsye and Leon May FoundationKeith&Mary Kay M
279、cCaw Family FoundationWilliam and Marie McGlashan Charitable FundPatrick J.McGovern FoundationThe Merlin Foundation Inc.Merlin FoundationMind the Gap 200 Sustainable Earth FundMinderoo FoundationMinocha Family Charitable FundMoccasin Lake FoundationMoore Family FoundationGordon and Betty Moore Found
280、ationThe Morgan Family FoundationMorgan Family FundThe MRB FoundationMulago FoundationMyhrvold&Havranek Family Charitable FundNational Arbor Day FoundationNational Fish and Wildlife FoundationNational Philanthropic TrustNevada Community FoundationNew Venture FundThe New York Community TrustNia TeroN
281、oronha-Dorai Family FundOak FoundationOceano Azul FoundationOceans 5OneCoolPlanetOpen Society FoundationsThe David and Lucile Packard FoundationArnold and Winne Palmer FoundationPantheraElizabeth R.and William J.Patterson FoundationPayPal Giving FundPC Fund for Animals Charitable TrustPeace Parks Fo
282、undationPeaceNexus FoundationPhilanthropy InternationalPisces FoundationPonant FoundationPrinceton Area Community FoundationPritzker FoundationRace Against ExtinctionRenaissance Charitable Foundation Inc.Resources Legacy Fund FoundationThe Grace Jones Richardson TrustThe Ringtail FundRockefeller Phi
283、lanthropy AdvisorsTony and Kyra Rogers FoundationRoxiticus FoundationRumah FoundationThe Safer-Fearer Fund of the New York Community TrustSalamander Fund of Triangle Community FoundationThe Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving Science-Based Targets Network,a sponsored project of Rockefeller Philanthrop
284、y AdvisorsThe Seattle FoundationFondation SegrSexton Family FoundationSikand Foundation,Inc.The Silicon Valley Community FoundationWilliam E.Simon FoundationAlbert&Lillian Small FoundationSothebys International Realty FoundationCharles Spear Charitable TrustThe Bernard and Anne Spitzer Charitable Tr
285、ustStearns Charitable TrustJoseph and Diane Steinberg 1992 Charitable TrustSunbridge FoundationThe Suwinski Family FoundationSwarovski FoundationSwedish Postcode FoundationSwiss Re FoundationThe T.Rowe Price Program for Charitable GivingFlora L.Thornton FoundationThree Graces Foundation,IncTides Fou
286、ndationTierra Pura FoundationThe Tiffany&Co.FoundationTisBest Charity Gift CardsTrust for Conservation InnovationTuring FoundationU.S.Charitable Gift TrustUK Online Giving FoundationUlupono Fund at the Hawaii Community FoundationVanguard Charitable Endowment ProgramVermont Community FoundationWaverl
287、y Street FoundationWaitt FoundationWalmart FoundationThe Walton Family Foundation,Inc.Rob&Melani Walton FoundationDavid and Sylvia Weisz Family FoundationWestley Family FoundationWiancko Charitable FoundationThe Wonderful Company FoundationRonald&Geri Yonover FoundationChristian V&Lisa D Young Famil
288、y FoundationSamuel R.Young FoundationGOVERNMENTS ANDORGANIZATIONSAfrican Leadership University LimitedAgence Franaise de Dveloppement(AFD)American Conservation Association,Inc.Aquaculture Stewardship CouncilAsociacin de Municipalidades EcuatorianasGovernment of AustraliaBritish Embassy QuitoUniversi
289、ty of ConnecticutCool EffectEarthShareEcotierraEnvironmental Defense FundEuropean UnionFederal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development BMZCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:10800:00:109Republic of the Fiji IslandsFiTI The Fisheries Transparency InitiativeFondo Colombi
290、a en PazForeign,Commonwealth and Development OfficeForest Carbon Partnership FacilityGovernment of the French RepublicGiving.sgGlobal Development GroupGlobal Environment FacilityGreen Climate FundThe GreenCape Sector Development AgencyHanns R.Neumann StiftungHarrow International School Hong KongStat
291、e of HawaiiIDH The Sustainable Trade InitiativeInter-American Development BankInternational Climate Initiative(IKI)International Fund for Agricultural DevelopmentInternational Institute for Environment and DevelopmentInternational Union for Conservation of NatureJapan Environmental Education ForumJa
292、pan International Corporation AgencyJapan International Forestry Promotion and Cooperation CenterKamehameha SchoolsMinistre de IEurope et des Affaires trangresMinistre de la Transition cologiqueMinistre de lEconomie,des Finances et de la RelanceMinistry of Education,Sports&Culture of SamoaMoreTrees
293、Inc.My TreesNational Aeronautics and Space AdministrationNational Geographic SocietyNational Oceanic&Atmospheric AdministrationNational Science FoundationThe Kingdom of the NetherlandsNordic Development FundNorways International Climate and Forest InitiativeNorwegian Agency for Development Cooperati
294、onOahu Economic Development BoardProject44 TeamRareRe:wildResonanceThe Royal SocietySave the BlueSmithsonian InstitutionStiftelsen Grid-ArendalSwedish International Development Cooperation Agency(SIDA)Tanglin Trust SchoolTetra Tech International Development ServicesThe Nature ConservancyUnited Natio
295、ns Development ProgrammeUnited Nations Environment ProgrammeFood and Agriculture Organization of the United NationsUnited States Embassy BeijingUnited World College Southeast AsiaU.S.Department of StateU.S.Fish and Wildlife ServiceU.S.Agency for International DevelopmentVerraUniversity of Washington
296、-EarthlabWildlife Conservation SocietyWorld Wildlife FundUniversity of WisconsinWorld Bank GroupYale UniversityKENYA,JONATHAN IRISHCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:11000:00:111AMERICAS COUNCIL Francisco Costa (Chairperson)New York,USASteve AndersonOhio,USAStefano ArnholdSo P
297、aulo,BrazilVivi Barguil de SarmientoBogot,Colombia Gonzalo Crdoba Bogot,ColombiaAna Rita Garcia LascurainMexico City,MexicoMark K.Gormley New York,USAJos Koechlin Lima,PeruJoel KornRio de Janeiro,BrazilJorge LondooBogot,ColombiaJorge Lopez DorigaLima,Peru Pablo Gabriel Obregn Bogot,ColombiaGeorgia P
298、essoaRio de Janeiro,BrazilJessica Sneider California,USALeon Teicher Bogot,Colombia&Vancouver,CanadaASIA PACIFIC BOARD OF DIRECTORSKevin Hardy(Chair)SingaporeLeo Tan Wee HinSingaporeLam Keong YeohSingaporeRichard Jeo SingaporeAUSTRALIA BOARD OF DIRECTORSRichard Jeo(Chair)SingaporePhilippa Walsh (Sec
299、retary)Katoomba,NSW,AustraliaAngus HoldenSydney,NSW,AustraliaRoewen WishartSydney,NSW,AustraliaKristofer HelgenSydney,NSW,AustraliaKim LawrenceBrisbane,QLD,AustraliaRobert BaigrieSingaporeBRAZIL ADVISORY COUNCILStefano Arnhold (President)So Paulo,BrazilAndra Aguiar AzevedoSo Paulo,BrazilMarcello Bri
300、toSo Paulo,BrazilLilian EstevesSo Paulo,BrazilGilberto GilRio de Janeiro,BrazilLuis JustoRio de Janeiro,BrazilCarlos KlinkBraslia,BrazilJoel KornRio de Janeiro,BrazilJairo LoureiroSo Paulo,BrazilMait LourenoSo Paulo,BrazilHlio MattarSo Paulo,BrazilEduardo MouraSo Paulo,BrazilCarlos NobreSo Paulo,Bra
301、zilJoyce PascowitchSo Paulo,BrazilFrancisco PiykoAcre,BrazilMait ProenaRio de Janeiro,BrazilBRAZIL BOARD OF DIRECTORSIuri Rapoport(President)So Paulo,BrazilDaniela RaikArlington,VA,U.S.Francisco BarbosaBelo Horizonte,BrazilIrene GarayRio de Janeiro,BrazilJos Galizia TundisiSo Carlos,BrazilPhilip OCo
302、nnorMissoula,MT,U.S.Robert ShevlinTrancoso,BrazilM.SanjayanArlington,VA,U.S.Sebastian TrongBogot,ColombiaSergio BessermanRio de Janeiro,BrazilThomas Eugene Lovejoy*Arlington,VA,U.S.THE EUROPE COUNCILAnnette AnthonyLondon,U.K.Riccardo BelliniParis,FranceMarie-Claire DaveuParis,FranceSabrina ElbaLondo
303、n,U.K.Joachim FaberMunich,GermanyCristina GallachBarcelona,SpainWill GardinerLondon,U.K.Nick KukrikaLondon,U.K.Stphane KurganLondon,U.K.Kim-Andre PotvinGeneva,SwitzerlandNick SouthgateLondon,U.K.Claire TutenuitParis,FranceGrace YuLondon,U.K.CI SCIENCE COUNCILSteve Bell(Chair)Founder,One Cool PlanetE
304、stes Park,CO,U.S.Mohamed BakarrSenior Environmental Specialist,Global Environment FacilityWashington,DC,U.S.Lyda HillFounder,Lyda Hill PhilanthropiesDallas,TX,U.S.Aileen LeeChief Program Officer,Environmental Conservation,Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Palo Alto,CA,U.S.Rebecca MooreDirector,Googl
305、e Earth,Earth Engine and Geo for GoodMountain View,CA,U.S.Peter SchlosserVice President and Vice Provost of the Global Futures Initiative,Arizona State UniversityTempe,AZ,U.S.Jorgen ThomsenDirector,Climate Solutions,MacArthur FoundationChicago,IL,U.S.Katie VogelheimPhilanthropist,Hansen Family Found
306、ation&Vogelheim Family TrustTiburon,CA,U.S.SINGAPORE BOARD OF DIRECTORSLam Keong Yeoh(Chair)SingaporeWei Wei LimSingaporeChen Chen LeeSingaporeKathlyn TanSingaporeByron AskinSingaporeRobert BaigrieSingaporeCONSERVATION SOUTH AFRICA BOARD OF DIRECTORSSimon Susman(Chair)Cape Town,South AfricaJulia Lev
307、inJohannesburg,South AfricaDr.Reuel KhozaJohannesburg,South AfricaOwen HendersonGreyton,South AfricaM.SanjayanArlington,VA,U.S.Lee Gillespie WhiteArlington,VA,U.S.Loyiso Pityana-NdlovuJohannesburg,South AfricaARNHOLD DISTINGUISHEDFELLOWSMark CarneyUnited KingdomDr.Johan RockstrmGermanyPresident Juan
308、 Manuel SantosColombiaREGIONAL AND PROGRAMMATIC BOARDS AND COUNCILSDISTINGUISHED AND SENIOR FELLOWSMichael OBrien OnyekaNairobi,KenyaDr.Peliwe LolwanaJohannesburg,South AfricaU.K.BOARDSimon Lyster(Chair)Essex,U.K.Sabrina ElbaLondon,U.K.Nick KukrikaLondon,U.K.Mike RandsCambridge,U.K.M.SanjayanArlingt
309、on,VA,U.S.Nick SouthgateLondon,U.K.*DeceasedLUI-WALTON SENIORFELLOWSHindou Oumarou IbrahimChadDr.Gnther BachmannGermanyJohn ScanlonSwitzerlandAs of February 2022CONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:11200:00:113SENIOR STAFF LISTEXECUTIVE LEADERSHIPM.Sanjayan,Ph.D.Chief Executive
310、OfficerAFRICA FIELD DIVISIONMichael OBrien-OnyekaSenior Vice PresidentJulia LevinVice President,Conservation International-South AfricaPeter MulbahCountry Director,Conservation International-LiberiaSahondra RajoelinaVice President,Conservation International-MadagascarRuud JansenCountry Director,Cons
311、ervation International-BotswanaBjorn StauchVice President,Conservation FinanceAMERICAS FIELD DIVISIONRachel BidermanSenior Vice President,AmericasLisa FamolareVice President,Nature for ClimateFabio ArjonaVice President,Conservation International-ColombiaLuis SuarezVice President,Conservation Interna
312、tional-EcuadorLuis EspinelVice President,Conservation International-PeruMauricio BiancoVice President,Conservation International-BrazilEduardo FornoExecutive Director,Conservation International-BoliviaJohn GoedschalkExecutive Director,Conservation International-SurinameCurtis BernardExecutive Direct
313、or,Conservation International-GuyanaAna Gloria Guzman MoraExecutive Director,Conservation International-Costa RicaMarco QuesadaVice President,Americas Field DivisionASIA-PACIFIC FIELD DIVISIONRichard Jeo,Ph.D.Senior Vice PresidentMeizani IrmadhianyDeputy Senior Vice PresidentYasushi HibiVice Preside
314、nt,Asia Policy and Managing Director,Conservation International-JapanKetut PutraAsia Transboundary Oceans Senior AdvisorXiaohai LiuExecutive Director,Conservation International-ChinaEnrique NuezExecutive Director,Conservation International-PhilippinesMark ErdmannVice President,Marine and Country Dir
315、ector,New ZealandSusana Waqainabete-TuiseseSenior Director,Pacific RegionMere LakebaCountry Director,Conservation International-FijiFranois TronCountry Director,Conservation International-New CaledoniaManuel MendesCountry Director,Conservation International-Timor-LesteSrabani RoyRegional Director,Gr
316、eater MekongRobert BaigrieVice President,Corporate and Ecosystem FinancesDebby FerdianyVice President,Operations,Asia-Pacific Field DivisionVirginia SimpsonCountry Manager,AustraliaBRAND+COMMUNICATIONSAnastasia KhooSenior Advisor to the CEO and Chief Marketing OfficerJenny ParkerVice President,Commu
317、nicationsJamie CrossVice President,Brand PartnershipsMelina FormisanoVice President,MarketingKelly ThalmanVice President of Strategic EngagementsTHE BETTY AND GORDON MOORE CENTER FOR SCIENCEJohan Rockstrm,Ph.D.Chief ScientistMichael B.Mascia,Ph.D.Senior Vice PresidentDaniel JuhnVice President,Assess
318、ing Natures ValuesDavid HoleVice President,Global SolutionsCENTER FOR COMMUNITIES AND CONSERVATIONKristen Walker PainemillaSenior Vice President and Managing DirectorLuis BarquinVice President,Communities and InnovationCENTER FOR NATURAL CLIMATE SOLUTIONSWill Turner,Ph.D.Senior Vice PresidentShyla R
319、aghavVice President,Climate ChangeCENTER FOR OCEANSAulani Wilhelm Senior Vice PresidentLaure KatzVice President,Blue NatureJack KittingerVice President,Blue ProductionAshleigh McGovernVice President,Development and InnovationEmily PidgeonVice President,Ocean Science and InnovationCENTER FOR SUSTAINA
320、BLE LANDS+WATERSBambi SemrocSenior Vice PresidentJohn BuchananVice President,Sustainable ProductionScott HendersonVice President,Sustainable Landscapes and SeascapesCI PEOPLE OPERATIONSKim KeatingChief People OfficerJennifer ProbstVice President,Global Human ResourcesCONSERVATION FINANCE DIVISIONAgu
321、stin Silvani Senior Vice PresidentSaima QadirGlobal Lead,Carbon FinanceCONSERVATION PARTNERSHIPSSebastian Trong,Ph.D.Executive Vice PresidentCRITICAL ECOSYSTEM PARTNERSHIP FUND(CEPF)Olivier Langrand Senior Vice PresidentDEVELOPMENTCynthia TapleyChief Development OfficerJulie Naranjo UphamVice Presid
322、ent,Individual GivingErin CarmanyVice President,Development&Campaign DirectorEUROPE AND GLOBAL PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPSHerbert Lust Senior Vice PresidentFIELD PROGRAMSDaniela Raik,Ph.D.Executive Vice PresidentKelvin AlieSenior Vice President,Field PartnershipsFINANCE,AWARD MANAGEMENT+GRANTS AND CONTRACTS
323、Barbara DiPietro Chief Financial OfficerLisa MangkonkarnController,Vice PresidentMatthew WoolieverVice President,Financial Information Management and ServicesGENERAL COUNSELS OFFICERick NashGeneral Counsel and Chief Compliance OfficerPatricia PettyVice President and Chief Privacy/Data Ethics Officer
324、GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY PROJECT AGENCY AND GREEN CLIMATE FUND IMPLEMENTING AGENCYMiguel Morales,Ph.D.Senior Vice PresidentFree de KoningVice President,Project Development and ImpactGLOBAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGYBrian FreedVice PresidentGLOBAL POLICYJames Roth Senior Vice PresidentLina BarreraVice
325、 President,International PolicyGLOBAL PROGRAMSJack HurdExecutive Vice PresidentKevin McNultyVice President,Finance and OperationsCONSERVATION INTERNATIONALCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:11400:00:115conservation.org/actWAYS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCEREMEMBER CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL IN YOUR WILL OR LIVI
326、NG TRUSTMAKE A ONE-TIME CONTRIBUTIONBECOME A MONTHLY SUPPORTERGIVE THROUGH A DONOR-ADVISED FUNDGIVE THROUGH YOUR WORKPLACEHONOR FRIENDS,FAMILY OR LOVED ONES WITH A GIFT IN THEIR NAMEJOIN THE EMERALD CIRCLE OF ANNUAL GIVERSFUNDRAISE FOR CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL THROUGH YOUR OWN EVENT OR ACTIVITYDON
327、ATE STOCKS,BONDS OR MUTUAL FUNDSCONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL00:00:1162011 Crystal Drive,Suite 600Arlington,VA 222021.800.429.5660www.conservation.orgwww.natureisspeaking.orgConservation International is dedicated to protecting the environment through sustainable paper and printing choices.The inside pages of this annual report are printed on paper made from 10%post-consumer recycled,FSC-certified fibers,and the cover is printed on paper made with FSC-certified fibers.Our printer is a 100%wind-powered,carbon-neutral operation.2021 Conservation International