In the vast forests and ecosystems of the Amazon, the Congo Basin and Southeast Asia, the Earth is still breathing. These territories are the lungs of the planet and the hearts of our peoples, the source of rivers, rains and clean air that sustain life everywhere.
For millennia, we have cared for these living systems through our own governance, knowledge systems and laws. Our ancestors are buried beneath the trees that feed the air you breathe.
Yet in global climate debates, we are still treated as beneficiaries of decisions made far away - when, in truth, we are their rightful architects. We refuse to be a box to tick! We are leaders!
The UN COP30 summit in Belém, in the heart of the Amazon, could be a turning point. But the proposals we see emerging like the new Tropical Forests Forever Facility (TFFF), risk repeating a familiar mistake: making plans for us, not with us.
At this historic summit, Indigenous peoples were excluded from the announcement, which only included national leaders. How, then, can we be assured that our voices - the voices of those who live within and protect these forests - will truly be heard?