Press Room
 

FROM THE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS

October 8, 2004
JS-2003

Debt For Nature Agreement to Conserve Jamaica’s Forests

The Governments of the United States of America and Jamaica, together with The Nature Conservancy, recently concluded agreements to reduce Jamaica's debt to the United States by nearly $16 million dollars. In return, the Government of Jamaica has committed to providing these resources over the next twenty years to fund projects to conserve and restore important tropical forest resources on the island nation of Jamaica.

The agreements were signed by U.S. Ambassador to Jamaica Sue Cobb, Jamaican Minister of Agriculture Roger Clarke, and The Nature Conservancy Country Director Terence Williams. The agreements were made possible through a grant of $6.5 million from the U.S. Government and a contribution of $1.3 million from The Nature Conservancy.

Jamaica has unique flora and fauna composed of a high percentage of endemic species, including 28 percent of its flowering plants and 25 breeding bird species. A growing number of plant and animal species are identified as vulnerable to extinction, critically imperiled or rare. The aim of this debt-for-nature swap is to help Jamaica in its fight to safeguard the valuable forests and rich biodiversity in several areas. This includes areas such as the Blue and John Crow Mountain Forest Reserve/National Park, home of the island's tallest peak, the endangered Giant Swallowtail Butterfly and a number of endemic orchids. It also includes the Portland Bight Protected Area, the only place on the island where the Jamaican Iguana, once thought to be extinct, is found in the wild.

The Tropical Forest Conservation Act of 1998 was first funded in 2000 to provide eligible developing countries opportunities to reduce concessional debts owed the United States while generating funds to conserve their forests. Jamaica is one of eight countries to benefit from the Act so far; other countries are Bangladesh, Belize, Colombia, El Salvador, Panama, the Philippines, and Peru. Together these agreements will generate over $95 million to protect tropical forests over the next 10-25 years.