Lao PDR

Phou Hang He, Xe Bang Nouan, Xe Sap, and Phou Xieng Thong
UN Boundaries
100%
Target sites - WDPA
100%
LegendTarget sites - WDPA legend
Solutions - Panorama
100%
Restoration initiatives - WOCAT
100%
Key Biodiversity Areas - KBA Partnership
100%
LegendKey Biodiversity Areas - KBA Partnership legend
Asean Heritage Parks
100%
LegendAsean Heritage Parks legend

Generating multiple benefits through strengthened protection of primary forest landscapes

The Lao People’s Democratic Republic (PDR) is strengthening the integrated management of primary forest landscapes within and around four National Protected Areas- Phou Hang He, Xe Bang Nouan, Xe Sap, and Phou Xieng Thong- together covering over 513,000 hectares across different biogeographic regions of the country, including the Annamite Range. Working across policy, governance, finance and community dimensions, it aims to durably reduce deforestation, enhance ecosystem services, and support the Indigenous Peoples and local communities whose lives and livelihoods are rooted in these forests.

Targets and Global Environment Benefits (GEB)

513K
hectares under improved management in 4 PAs
50K
hectares under improved management in PA corridors and buffer zones
3.5K
hectares of ecosystems under restoration
8K
people benefitting directly
4.7M
metric tons of CO2 mitigated over 20-year period

Partners


The project is implemented by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and executed by the Department of Forestry (DOF) in the Ministry of Agriculture of Lao PDR. 

Led byUNDP
DOF
Supported byGEF

Our Funding

9M
GEF investment
41.6M
Co-finance

How the project responds

1. Strengthening the enabling environment

Integrating primary forest landscapes into national forest management and land-use planning, including a national primary forest policy linked to 2035 National Forest Strategy and an integrated management strategy for the Annamite Range. 

2. Enhancing Protected Area governance and management

Promoting inclusive area-based conservation, empowering local communities, women and ethnic groups through sustainable livelihood opportunities and collaborative management, and building PA management and governance capacities at subnational levels.

3.Expanding inclusive conservation beyond Protected Areas

Strengthening the management of primary forests in buffer zones and ecological corridors through collaborative village planning and landscape restoration, while promoting sustainable agricultural practices and producer–public–private partnerships that reduce pressure on forest edges. The project also explores recognition of Other Effective Conservation Measures (OECMs), including community-conserved areas, Indigenous lands, and sacred forests.

4. Mobilizing sustainable finance

Assessing opportunities to expand and diversify conservation financing, piloting innovative financing instruments in project landscapes, and building institutional capacity to design and apply solutions for primary forest conservation.