| Shompole Community wins Equator Award |
|
|
|
| Sunday, 27 May 2007 | |
|
The Equator Prize is the flagship of the Equator Initiative, a partnership that brings together the United Nations, civil society, business, governments and communities to help build the capacity and raise the profile of grassroots efforts to reduce poverty through the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity. Shompole Community Trust was one of five indigenous communities recognized by the 2006 Equator Prize. In announcing the win, the Equator Initiative wrote:
"A simple fact lies at the heart of the Equator Initiative's work: the world's greatest concentrations of biological wealth are found in the tropics, in countries that also have some of the highest levels of poverty," explains the Initiative's website. Shompole, between Lakes Magadi and Natron in the Great Rift Valley of southern Kenya, lies at the heart of the world's richest region for vertebrate diversity. Their stewardship has helped bring back dwindling elephant herds, as well as many other wildlife.
The near future is bringing exciting developments that promise to be as innovative as always: ● Recognizing that there are great threats on the near horizon to the world as well as the South Rift region from global climate change, the community is seizing the opportunity to turn those threats into opportunities. Along with their sister community of Olkiramatian they will be working with the African Conservation Centre and specialists like Dr. David Western to link South Rift conservation of biodiversity to carbon-offset credits in the West.
Please contact us if you would like to be a part of supporting this superb effort.
|
|
| Last Updated ( Monday, 27 August 2007 ) |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
Subscribe to Our Newsletter

In May the United National Development Programme announced that Shompole Community Trust has won one of its prestigious Equator Awards for 2006.
Since 1979, the Shompole Ranch,
spanning over 62,000 hectares of Kenya’s grasslands and savannahs, has
preserved and restored the local environment. Re-emerging and thriving
wetlands have attracted an increasing number of tourists. Revenue from
ecotourism has been invested through the Shompole Community Trust in
protecting and restoring the environment, as well as in funding
healthcare services, education, water supply, and school fees. The
trust, a legally recognized corporation, is owned by the Maasai people
and addresses issues of socio-economic development on behalf of the
community.
[Shompole Mountain shown above.]
Working with partners like the African Conservation Centre, the community set aside one of the first community wildlife sanctuaries, developed land-use plans, engage in science, and attract eco-tourism. Through years of experience, the community has learned hard lessons in how to build business partnerships that benefit the community as well as the investor.
- Volunteer - your time & talents.
Welcome
to our conservation community, linking East Africa with the rest of the
world. We are a growing organization comprising people like you,
concerned about the future of wildlife and cultures in East Africa.
This site is a hub as well as a bridge for conservation practitioners
and their supporters, connecting everyone to more information and
capacity resources to help conserve the wildlife and cultures of East
Africa. 
