Enduring Earth
Collaborating for lasting conservation at scale.
Last updated June 26, 2024
Indigenous Leadership and Collaboration
In June 2024, 17 First Nations of the North Pacific Coast, the Government of Canada, and the Government of British Columbia announced the Great Bear Sea PFP, a co-governance and financing model that will protect culturally and environmentally significant ocean waters, while benefiting communities and economies.
Enduring Earth is a collaboration of The Nature Conservancy, The Pew Charitable Trusts, World Wildlife Fund and ZOMALAB—who are working with local communities to mobilize ambition, resources and permanent funding for nations to tackle the world’s biodiversity and climate crises.
Our planet is gripped by dual crises: biodiversity loss and climate change are rapidly altering our world and the natural systems we depend on. But we still have a chance to bend the trajectory of these threats so that people and nature can thrive.
The scientific evidence shows we can stem these crises if we protect at least 30% of lands, ocean and fresh water by 2030. In 2022, nearly 200 countries pledged to do just that—but most lack the support and the durable financing to deliver on these ambitions.
That’s where Enduring Earth comes in. Enduring Earth offers a proven pathway to achieve the world’s 30x30 goal with strategies that are effective, lasting, inclusive and beneficial to local communities’ economies.
Enduring Earth: An Ambitious Approach
The Nature Conservancy, along with The Pew Charitable Trusts, World Wildlife Fund and ZOMALAB, created Enduring Earth, an initiative that engages nations and local communities across the planet to accelerate lasting conservation. Enduring Earth partners share staff, donors and technical expertise—no matter which organization leads a project. By pooling our resources around a shared mission, the collaboration leads to lasting and positive impact at a scale greater than what any one institution could achieve alone.
By 2030, Enduring Earth intends to:
- Protect more than 1 billion hectares of land, ocean and freshwater systems;
- Work in partnership to secure at least $2 billion in new funding to support sustainable economic growth;
- Invest in greater protection and effective management of protected lands and waters; and
- Uphold the rights of local communities and Indigenous Peoples.
PFPs: Conservation's Most Powerful Tool
Central to Enduring Earth’s approach is a proven model called Project Finance for Permanence (PFP), perhaps the most powerful tool in the conservation toolbox. In a “single close” moment, rights-holders and stakeholders formally adopt a full conservation plan and funding commitments to protect systems of conservation areas for generations to come. It’s a proven strategy that has been used in places such as Canada, Brazil and Costa Rica.
Several interdependent components help distinguish Enduring Earth and PFPs from other conservation finance and planning tools, including:
- The Single Close. All necessary funds must be committed and all closing conditions must be met before a PFP deal is done. This single close moment brings together all rights-holders and stakeholders, funding commitments, conservation and community blueprints and governance that are needed for lasting conservation. Until these are secured, no one writes a check, and no dollar is distributed.
- Conservation at Scale. PFPs don’t work with single sites or landscapes and seascapes. They work with entire systems of conservation areas, and have ambitious, unifying and measurable conservation goals.
- Durable Financing. PFPs develop financial models that deliver the funding needed for nature for the foreseeable future.
- Indigenous and Community Stewardship. Community engagement, leadership and benefits are pillars of the PFP model. Conservation plans are co-designed with local leaders and communities to ensure that their goals and values are integrated.
- Governance and Accountability. Funds and the ambitious vision are administered by an independently governed entity, and new funds are disbursed based on performance and delivery of outcomes.
Quote: Jennifer Morris
A Story of Global Impact
Putting PFPs into Practice
The PFP approach was first tested by First Nations in Canada, supported by TNC, to secure protection and long-term management of portions of the Great Bear Rainforest in 2006. TNC's next PFP, Forever Costa Rica, followed in 2010. The PFP model has since been used in four other large projects led by WWF in Brazil, Bhutan, Peru and most recently in Colombia.
When it formed in 2021, Enduring Earth identified 10 new PFP projects in its first phase (through 2025), including four led by TNC: in Mongolia, Kenya, Gabon and the Great Bear Sea in Canada. In April 2024, the Government of Mongolia, in collaboration with local herding communities, The Nature Conservancy and Enduring Earth, launched the Eternal Mongolia PFP, which dedicates 15 years of conservation investment and unlocks US$198 million to deliver durable and lasting conservation and sustainable community development in Mongolia.
Designed to help Mongolia achieve its 30x30 conservation ambitions to protect its lands and fresh water, it is the largest land-based protection deal in TNC’s history. In June 2024, a PFP led by 17 First Nations—with the support of federal and provincial governments— was announced, providing for the conservation of 10 million hectares of ocean and coastal areas in the Great Bear Sea region of Canada, and supporting sustainable local economies.
Now is the Time to Act
For the first time in human history, the world has come together with a common goal to protect nature. But we must act now to make these historic commitments a reality and to accelerate durable conservation at a pace and scale never seen before.
Enduring Earth and the PFP model represent one of the best opportunities to enable countries to meet their conservation and climate goals. Around the world, Enduring Earth partners are working to establish and expand permanently protected areas and improve how they’re managed, secure long-term government commitments that achieve conservation at scale and bring economic and wellbeing benefits to communities.
The time is now to create a world where people and nature thrive.
Case Studies
Great Bear Sea
The Great Bear Sea PFP will protect and improve the management of 10 million hectares of oceans that are vital to nature and people, and it provides a globally relevant example of Indigenous-led protection of nature and people.
Eternal Mongolia
In collaboration with TNC and others, Mongolia launched the Eternal Mongolia PFP in 2024, unlocking US$198 million to safeguard 14.4 million hectares of lands and waters, and strengthen management of a total of 81 million hectares.
Great Bear Rainforest
A landmark conservation effort between First Nations, the British Columbia government, environmental groups and forest companies protected millions of forest acres, with the balance managed under some of the world’s most stringent harvest standards.
Forever Costa Rica
The PFP Forever Costa Rica tripled the country’s marine protected areas and improved the management of its entire national park system, making Costa Rica the first developing nation to meet its goal to protect 30 percent of its lands and ocean.
Heritage Colombia
The 2022 WWF-led Heritage Colombia PFP secured $245 million in public and private funding to permanently protect 32 million hectares of landscapes and seascapes, achieving Colombia’s goal of protecting 30% of its oceans and seas.
PFP Disclosures
As part of the Enduring Earth partnership, TNC is working with the Government of Gabon to develop a PFP that would help fund the country’s ambitious goal to protect 30 percent of its marine, terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems by 2030. The project is funded in part by the Global Environment Facility. Download the stakeholder engagement plan and the environmental and social management framework here:
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