
BELÉM, Brazil, Might 21 (IPS) – On Brazil’s northeastern coast, the Indigenous group, Tremembé da Barra do Mundaú, lives on a preserved stretch of land formed by mangroves, dunes, and abandoned seashores. The group of round 160 households is led by ladies and is dependent upon the three,500-hectare territory for fishing and subsistence farming.
In 2023, the Tremembé received federal recognition of their ancestral land within the state of Ceará – giving them formal management over the territory.
However their residence stays beneath menace. As tourism has expanded, they’ve confronted rising strain from actual property developments and round 100 non-Indigenous settlers. A push for renewable vitality has additionally introduced close by wind tasks that the group says harm the setting and disrupt their lifestyle.
“We now have many issues right here, together with trash in our rivers, vehicles scaring away animals, and other people damaging the dunes,” stated Cleidiane Tremembé, an area Indigenous trainer. “With the set up of wind farms, many fish species have additionally disappeared from our river, and we’re catching fewer fish.”

This Might, the group will start investing roughly US$300,000 in efforts to guard their territory. The funds come from the Ywy Ipuranguete (‘lovely land’) undertaking – an bold initiative that goals to distribute a complete of US$9 million to fifteen Indigenous Lands throughout Brazil by 2030.
The undertaking is coordinated by Brazil’s Ministry of Indigenous Peoples (MPI), carried out by the Brazilian Biodiversity Fund (FUNBIO), and financed by means of the World Biodiversity Framework Fund (GBFF). The GBFF, whose donors embrace the governments of Canada, Norway and the UK, is managed by the World Setting Facility (GEF) – the world’s largest multilateral environmental fund.
In accordance with the GEF, the purpose is to assist the safety of Indigenous territories as a technique to preserve biodiversity and strengthen local weather resilience.
“A rising physique of proof reveals that territories managed by Indigenous Peoples — notably the place land tenure is formally recognised — constantly rank among the many best settings for sustaining biodiversity, retaining carbon shares, and preserving ecological integrity, typically outperforming each unprotected lands and formally designated conservation areas,” stated Adriana Moreira, Lead of the Partnerships Division on the GEF.
If absolutely carried out, the undertaking would assist defend 6.4 million hectares and attain round 61,000 Indigenous folks.
Following the undertaking’s launch in March 2025, the Tremembé can be among the many first communities to place the funds into motion.

Mateus Castro, a group member coordinating the work domestically, stated the cash can be used primarily to accumulate drones, radio transmitters, automobiles and a ship to assist safe the territory’s boundaries.
“We need to monitor and report the presence of outsiders,” he stated in an interview. “This undertaking will enable us to have the instruments that give our territory safety and autonomy.”
The identical tools would assist the group stock native ecosystems and animal species. Their coastal stretch is residence to a variety of species – from fish and crabs to endangered sea turtles.
“We need to report the species alongside our shoreline so we will use that data as a defence in opposition to the licensing of recent offshore wind farms,” he stated.
With the funding, additionally they plan to reforest degraded areas, practice native environmental brigades, and fund conventional festivals. The primary would be the Farinhada Pageant that takes place in July. In the course of the festivities, households have fun cassava as a sacred meals and put together conventional dishes for youthful generations.
“In Indigenous tradition, all the pieces is linked,” Castro stated. “Our purpose is to protect our land, tradition, and id for the youngsters who’re but to be born. We’re considering 100, 200 years from now.”
Future Plans
The Indigenous communities chosen to take part within the Ywy Ipuranguete undertaking had been chosen by FUNAI, Brazil’s federal Indigenous affairs company, with enter from Indigenous organisations.
The precedence was given to teams exterior the Amazon, together with the Tremembé in Ceará, as a part of an effort to decentralise environmental funding. Almost half of Brazil’s 1.69 million Indigenous folks reside exterior the Authorized Amazon, in keeping with the authorized census.
“If we have a look at environmental tasks basically, funding, implementation, and assets are normally centered on the Amazon,” stated Francisco Itamar Gonçalves Melgueiro, FUNAI’s normal coordinator for environmental insurance policies. “That’s the reason we distributed the undertaking throughout 5 biomes in Brazil – the Amazon, Pantanal, Cerrado, Caatinga and Atlantic Forest.”
FUNAI additionally chosen communities that had lately eliminated invaders from their lands, together with the Kayapó and Munduruku, who’ve been in battle with unlawful miners within the Amazon for many years. “After that removing, we see a possibility for Indigenous peoples to totally retake possession of their territories,” Melgueiro stated.
Communities didn’t want their territories to be absolutely recognised by the federal authorities to qualify for the funding. Nonetheless, they needed to submit detailed plans, often called PGTAs, that are a part of a broader set of Indigenous territorial and environmental administration paperwork.

“These plans function blueprints for his or her future and canopy a variety of themes and actions,” Melgueiro stated. “They’re an instrument of the peoples, constructed by the peoples.”
However many are nonetheless engaged on their PGTAs. Greater than a decade after Brazil created the framework for these plans, a 2023 civil-society report discovered that Indigenous communities have acquired little assist for his or her improvement, particularly in the course of the administration of Brazilian right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro. To this point, FUNAI has mapped simply 148 PGTAs in a rustic with greater than 800 Indigenous Lands.
The primary yr of the Ywy Ipuranguete undertaking has been largely devoted to serving to taking part communities finalise and element their PGTAs. The Brazilian Biodiversity Fund (FUNBIO), GEF’s implementing company, instructed IPS that this “is an enormous and meticulous endeavor”, as they work with Indigenous communities to “decide which PGTA actions are to be undertaken, the very best strategies for executing them, and the particular implementation preparations for every Indigenous Land”.
In accordance with Brazil’s Ministry of Indigenous Peoples (MPI), solely about 8% of the full funds has been spent up to now, totally on planning, coordination and preliminary actions. Finally, MPI stated, 75% of the funds will go on to the communities, with a lot of the funding transferred to Indigenous organisations. “Investing in Indigenous peoples to keep up their very own methods of current is investing within the survival of humanity itself,” the ministry stated in an announcement.

In an e-mail, Brazil’s Ministry of Indigenous Peoples (MPI) stated solely about 8% of the full funds has been spent up to now, totally on planning, coordination and preliminary actions. Finally, MPI stated, 75% of the funds will go on to the communities, with a lot of the funding transferred to Indigenous organisations.
“Investing in Indigenous peoples to keep up their very own methods of current is investing within the survival of humanity itself,” the ministry stated in an announcement.
In Tremembé da Barra do Mundaú, the place plans are underway, the group feels prepared. The funding will construct on years of labor, from coaching younger environmental brokers to documenting meals traditions.
“This is among the largest assets the territory has ever acquired,” Castro stated. “For us, it’s an enormous alternative to consolidate and strengthen our mission of caring for the land.”
Observe: The Eighth World Setting Facility Meeting can be held from Might 30 to June 6, 2026, in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.
This function is revealed with the assist of the GEF. IPS is solely chargeable for the editorial content material, and it doesn’t essentially replicate the views of the GEF.
IPS UN Bureau Report
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