3. International Land Tenure Commitment: Advancing Rights for Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and Local Communities
The International Land Tenure Commitment brings together 15 countries, including Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Fiji, Indonesia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, in a pledge to recognize and protect 160 million hectares of Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and local community lands by 2030. Announced at the World Leaders Summit ahead of COP30, this commitment marks the first time countries have come together to set time-bound, quantitative goals for land rights recognition. Brazil, COP30’s host country, is expected to contribute at least 59 million hectares, more than one-third of the total pledge.
Technical and analytical tools, including RRI’s Opportunity Framework, helped identify areas where recognition is both feasible and most urgent, providing governments with a clear roadmap to achieve measurable outcomes.
4. Tropical Forest Forever Facility: $7 Billion to Protect Forests with Indigenous Leadership
The Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF), designed to support the conservation of tropical forests, received nearly $7 billion in pledges, with 20% specifically designated for Indigenous Peoples and local communities. Led by Brazil in collaboration with 11 other countries, the initiative aims to raise $25 billion in sponsor capital.
RRI’s Path to Scale facilitated negotiations with community leaders, including key discussions earlier this year at the Brazzaville Forest Basins Congress, ensuring that IndigenousPeoples’ and local communities’ perspectives were central to the TFFF’s design and priorities.
5. Belém Call for the Congo Basin: $2.5 Billion to Safeguard Critical Rainforests
The Congo Basin, home to some of the world’s largest and oldest tropical peatland complexes, plays a critical role in climate change mitigation. At COP30, a coalition of donors pledged $2.5 billion to protect this biodiverse ecosystem under the Belem Call for the Forests of the Congo Basin, led by France and Gabon, and supported by Germany, Norway, Belgium, the United Kingdom, the European Commission, the World Bank, and the African Development Bank.
Presented on November 18 during the COP30—also referred to as forests day—, the funding, combined with domestic contributions from Central African countries, aims to end deforestation in the Congo Basin by 2030, strengthen conservation through technology and training, and support local communities in managing and protecting their forests.
6. Historic Recognition of Afro-descendant Peoples in UNFCCC Negotiations
For the first time in over 30 years, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), together with Caribbean partners, referenced Afro-descendant Peoples in core negotiation documents, including texts on Just Transition, Gender Action, and the Global Goal on Adaptation. While Afro-descendant Peoples are not yet recognized as a standalone constituency within the UNFCCC framework, this mention places them alongside other groups disproportionately affected by climate change and central to its mitigation, providing a new platform to advocate for their rights.
The recognition follows sustained advocacy by Afro-descendant organizations and allies, including the Coalition of Afro-descendant Peoples and Territories (CITAFRO)—representing 16 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean—and members of the RRI coalition.