WWF has been working in the region as of 1998, focusing on the sedimentation plain (Gran Pantanal) through conservation programmes in both Bolivia and Brazil. Aware that conservation in the Pantanal depends on the integral maintenance of the Upper Paraguay River Watershed, the programme is now expanding efforts to other related ecosystems located outside the wetland.
WWF Bolivia’s Pantanal Programme
The objective of the Pantanal Programme is to maintain the hydro-biological processes that sustain the Upper Paraguay River Watershed, and the Pantanal in particular, facilitating sustainable development opportunities and environmental management in the region.
The interventions of WWF in the Pantanal are based on institutional strength obtained from working through a world network which promotes coordinated efforts in cross-border regions. Activities are implemented in a coordinated manner between WWF Brazil and WWF Bolivia, through an ecoregional plan resulting from technical analysis that helped defining the intervention strategies for the next three years in the Pantanal (2010-2012).
1. Climate Change
Objective: Identify the impacts and risks associated with climate change for the Pantanal, developing and implementing adaptation strategies.
In spite of general information regarding the effect of climate change in wetlands, including the effect in the Pantanal and its watershed, this information is disperse and insufficient in describing the magnitude of the impacts of climate change in this ecoregion.
WWF is thus working on systematizing existing information and making it available to key stakeholders working on climate change. Having this information organized will also allow identifying where research still needs to be carried out, as well as designing strategies that reduce the vulnerability of the watershed in the face of climate change.
2. Sustainable cattle ranching
Objective: Sustainable cattle ranching is recognized as a conservation and development option for the Pantanal.
Sustainable cattle ranching activities in the Pantanal consistently link environmental protection with economic development in the region. In addition, it reinforces productive practices and traditional cultural values that in turn reinforce the Pantanal’s identity and become a real opportunity to make the economic interests of cattle ranching compatible with conservation.
3. Land use planning
Objective: Development options in the Pantanal take into consideration an integral vision in relation to changes in land use and its impact on hydro-biological pulses.
In alliance with public and private stakeholders, WWF hopes to contribute towards the design and implementation of Municipal Plans on Land Use Regulation (referred to as PMOT) through municipal environmental management, in order to ensure the conservation of the watershed.
4. Corporate Social and Environmental Responsibility
Objective: At least two iron and steel mining companies in the Pantanal watershed insert criteria for environmental responsibility in their corporate policies, with special emphasis on charcoal and liquid waste management.
There is a growing demand for charcoal on behalf of the iron and steel industry in the region. WWF aims to influence the corporate policies of these companies in order for them to adopt responsibility criteria regarding environmental contamination caused by waste or from poor water management during the iron and ore production process. Likewise, the idea is that their responsibility policies contemplate the problem of using charcoal and promoting the purchase of differentiated products that consider the sustainable management of native forests or tree plantations.
The four lines of action are supported by a communications campaign under the slogan “
Pantanal, unifying waters”, contributing to the knowledge and valorization of the Pantanal, with special emphasis on its sustainable development.