25 November 2025 – In the context of widespread concern about a lack of Indigenous representation at the UN climate summit, Everland was honored to convene two gatherings of Indigenous leaders at COP30 including one at ALDEIA COP – the Indigenous Village and central hub for Indigenous participation these past weeks in Belém.

At the Indigenous Village, key stakeholders of the Indigenous Amazon Outcome Bond initiative came together in dialogue shaped by representatives of communities who are considering participating in the initiative.

“At COP30, Indigenous leaders spoke with one voice: the world must stop the destruction of our forests, the exploitation of our peoples, and the erasure of our cultures. This has been our struggle for our rights and justice across generations. We are witnessing a tragedy unfolding. The threats to our forests and our way of life are pushing our peoples to the edge of disappearance – life that cannot be replaced, and once it is gone, it is gone forever,” said Chief Almir Suruí, Chief of the Paiter Suruí People and speaker at the ALDEIA COP event. “No one knows how to protect the forest better than the peoples who have lived with it, defended it, and depended on it since time immemorial. Without us, the forests will not stand. And without the forests, there is no solution to the climate crisis.”

So far, projects representing nearly 90,000 Indigenous and traditional community members across 17 million hectares of pan-Amazonian rainforest have expressed their interest in the Indigenous Amazon Outcome Bond initiative. For us at Everland, it is a profound honor and a significant responsibility that these communities are considering partnering with us.

This responsibility – and the urgent need for action – was underlined at a second gathering that we hosted one day later in Belém, where more Indigenous leaders met to share their experiences and priorities with other stakeholders of the initiative.

Panellists and participants gather at ALDEIA COP for Everland’s event on Thursday 13 November. Panellists from left to right: Beto Borges, Director of Communities & Territorial Governance Initiative, Forest Trends; Chief Almir Suruí, Chief of the Paiter Suruí People; Fernanda Ribeiro, Director of Institutional Partnerships, Panthera; Manuela Yamada, Director of Certification, Equitable Earth; Constance Chalchat, Global Chief Sustainability Officer, BNP Paribas Corporate & Institutional Banking; Gerald Prolman, Executive Chairman, Everland. Credit: Edivan Guajajara for Everland

At the Indigenous Village, key stakeholders of the Indigenous Amazon Outcome Bond initiative came together in dialogue shaped by representatives of communities who are considering participating in the initiative.

“At COP30, Indigenous leaders spoke with one voice: the world must stop the destruction of our forests, the exploitation of our peoples, and the erasure of our cultures. This has been our struggle for our rights and justice across generations. We are witnessing a tragedy unfolding. The threats to our forests and our way of life are pushing our peoples to the edge of disappearance – life that cannot be replaced, and once it is gone, it is gone forever,” said Chief Almir Suruí, Chief of the Paiter Suruí People and speaker at the ALDEIA COP event. “No one knows how to protect the forest better than the peoples who have lived with it, defended it, and depended on it since time immemorial. Without us, the forests will not stand. And without the forests, there is no solution to the climate crisis.”

So far, projects representing nearly 90,000 Indigenous and traditional community members across 17 million hectares of pan-Amazonian rainforest have expressed their interest in the Indigenous Amazon Outcome Bond initiative. For us at Everland, it is a profound honor and a significant responsibility that these communities are considering partnering with us.

This responsibility – and the urgent need for action – was underlined at a second gathering that we hosted one day later in Belém, where more Indigenous leaders met to share their experiences and priorities with other stakeholders of the initiative.

Chief Almir Suruí, Chief of the Paiter Suruí People addresses other Indigenous leaders at Everland’s second COP30 event on Friday 14 November Credit: Edivan Guajajara for Everland

“There is a path forward – but it is narrow and urgent. It requires immediate, real resources, delivered in the way we have long called for: directly to our communities and under our leadership. We are turning to the Indigenous Amazon Outcome Bond to finance our REDD+ projects, and to the Equitable Earth Standard for credible verification of real conservation results, because these approaches respect our right to design and control our own solutions, and ensure that finance reaches our territories – not top-down systems built far from the forest, where funds disappear into distant institutions and our communities are left with empty hands,” said Chief Suruí who also spoke alongside other Indigenous leaders at the second gathering.

Everland was represented throughout by our Executive Chairman, Gerald Prolman – who reiterated the purpose and design of the Indigenous Amazon Outcome Bond initiative, alongside Everland’s commitment to community-led forest conservation.

Everland’s Gerald Prolman stands to speak at ALDEIA COP, Thursday 13 November alongside fellow panellists Manuela Yamada, Equitable Earth (left) and Constance Chalchat, BNP Paribas.Credit: Edivan Guajajara for Everland

“We are here for one purpose: to stand with you as we begin a journey of connecting you directly to the resources you need, in the way you have asked for,” Gerald said to the community representatives gathered. “The Blue Zone may be somewhere else in the city, but I’m honored to be here at the real COP of forests – and to witness this gathering of leaders whose peoples have protected the Amazon for generations.”

Overall, it’s been a crucial few weeks for Indigenous-centered forest conservation.

Equitable Earth announced the launch of its new forest conservation methodology, and The Wall Street Journal reported the news that we – Everland – have already secured Letters of Intent totalling $160 million from companies seeking to purchase carbon credits from the Indigenous Amazon Outcome Bond initiative’s portfolio of projects.

Ultimately, the initiative aims to provide $50 million in upfront capital to launch up to 20 new Indigenous-centered forest conservation projects in the Amazon to be verified by Equitable Earth. The sale of carbon credits from these projects is expected to channel more than $1 billion to the projects over their first ten years, with communities directly receiving the majority of this revenue to invest in their own self-determined goals. For all projects in Brazil, communities will receive at least 70% of carbon credit revenue.