Aerial view of dense Amazon rainforest canopy for an article about Indigenous land rights

Nine nations pledge to recognize 395 million acres of Indigenous land by 2030

Nine countries have made one of the largest collective land tenure commitments in modern history, pledging to formally recognize roughly 160 million hectares — about 395 million acres — of Indigenous and traditional community land by 2030. Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Gabon, Guatemala, the Republic of Congo, Peru, and Venezuela joined the pledge, which would give legal title to millions of Indigenous and local people over territories their communities have stewarded for generations.

At a glance

  • Indigenous land rights: Nine nations have committed to formally recognizing 395 million acres of Indigenous and traditional community lands by 2030 — an area larger than Peru — marking one of the largest collective land tenure pledges on record.
  • Climate connection: The territories involved include some of the world’s most carbon-dense ecosystems, among them tropical rainforests and wetlands across South America and Central Africa, regions consistently identified as critical to global climate stability.
  • Governance framework: The commitment is grounded in the principle of free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC), drawing on the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as its foundational legal standard.

Why Indigenous land rights change the climate equation

Decades of research point to the same conclusion: when Indigenous communities hold legal title to their land, forests survive. The World Resources Institute has documented repeatedly that Indigenous-managed forests show lower rates of deforestation and carbon loss than state-managed or commercially managed equivalents.

That pattern holds across continents, across legal systems, and across political climates.

Legal recognition does more than protect trees. It unlocks economic agency. With secure tenure, communities can invest in sustainable forestry, agroforestry, and ecotourism on their own terms — choices that only make sense when people know the land will remain theirs. Without that security, the incentives run in the opposite direction.

Forests at the heart of the 30×30 goal

The territories covered by this commitment are not peripheral lands. They sit at the center of some of the planet’s most biologically rich ecosystems — Amazonian rainforest, Congolese wetlands, Andean transition zones. Protecting them is functional climate policy, not symbolism.

This pledge directly supports the global 30×30 target, the international goal of protecting 30% of Earth’s land and ocean by 2030, adopted by more than 190 nations under the Convention on Biological Diversity. Indigenous territories, when legally secured, count among the most reliably protected areas on the planet. Rainforest Foundation Norway has found that secure Indigenous territories consistently outperform state-protected areas on both deforestation rates and biodiversity retention.

What recognition actually means

Formal recognition is not only a legal instrument. It is an acknowledgment that Indigenous Peoples hold inherent rights to govern their territories according to their own laws, customs, and ecological knowledge — knowledge accumulated over centuries that no external institution can replicate.

The coalition’s emphasis on FPIC matters here. It means communities cannot simply be notified of decisions made about their land. They must be meaningfully consulted before any action is taken, with the genuine ability to refuse.

That principle, enshrined in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, has too often remained aspirational in practice. What this pledge offers is a mechanism — backed by donor nations, private philanthropies, and major conservation organizations — to translate that principle into verified demarcation and legal titling on the ground.

An imperfect but significant model

Commitments of this scale carry real risks. The gap between pledge and implementation has swallowed similar ambitions before. Demarcation is slow, expensive, and often contested by extractive industries and large landholders with political influence. Several of the nine nations involved have complicated recent records on Indigenous rights enforcement.

Still, the structure here is different from a unilateral government promise. International coalitions, independent monitoring bodies, and civil society organizations are embedded in the process — creating accountability layers that purely domestic pledges typically lack. The International Land Coalition has long argued that land tenure security is among the most cost-effective interventions available for both climate and human rights outcomes. This commitment puts that argument to a concrete test across nine jurisdictions simultaneously.

The nine nations span three continents and include some of the largest tropical forest countries on Earth. If even most of this pledge is honored, the result would represent the largest formal expansion of Indigenous land rights in modern history — and a meaningful proof of concept for what conservation can achieve when it places Indigenous governance at the center.

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