Mexico, Guatemala and Belize to create tri-national nature reserve to protect Mayan jungle
The tri-national corridor will protect nearly 7,000 species and reinforce cross-border cooperation amid ongoing debate over the Maya Train’s environmental impact, officials said.
- In recent years, Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize discussed a conservation corridor amid controversy over the Maya Train, which environmental groups criticize for environmental damage.
- Authorities report the Maya Train has cut down about 7 million trees over four years, damaging jungle and cave systems, according to Mexico-based collective Selvame.
- The corridor will engage Indigenous and Afro-descendant communities and is expected to safeguard nearly 7,000 species, including 200 at risk, 50 priority, and 250 endemic to Mexico.
- Conservation measures include designating August 15 as the 'Day of the Great Maya Forest' from 2026 and Mexico’s Sembrando Vida program entering a second phase in Guatemala and Belize.
- Future routing will require thorough environmental studies and an alternative loop route, as Bernardo Arévalo insisted extensions must avoid protected ecosystems in Petén.
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Mexico, Guatemala and Belize want to protect the Mayan rainforest better.
Mexico, Guatemala and Belize Launch Trinational Corridor to Protect the Great Maya Forest - teleSUR English
Mexico, Guatemala and Belize have signed an agreement to establish the Biocultural Corridor of the Great Maya Forest, a trinational conservation initiative covering 5.7 million hectares across Mesoamerica. The project seeks to protect biodiversity, strengthen community participation, and reinforce cross-border cooperation. RELATED: July Breaks Streak of Record Temperatures, But Climate Crisis Continues The corridor, described as the largest of i…
The agreement signed by President Claudia Sheinbaum, Bernardo Arévalo of Guatemala and John Antonio Briceño of Belize, aims to save nearly 7,000 species, including 200 classified as risky, 50 priority and 250 endemic to Mexico.
Tri-National Nature Reserve to Preserve the Mayan Rainforest Amid Train Line Controversy
Leaders from Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize have announced a tri-national nature reserve to protect the Mayan rainforest. This move follows discussions about expanding the Maya Train, a project criticized for environmental damage. The nature reserve aims to preserve over 14 million acres of critical habitat.
Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico.- The governments of Mexico, Guatemala and Belize pledged to protect the 5.7 million hectares of the Maya Forest that extends across the three countries. During the signing ceremony of the agreement, President Claudia Sheinbaum stressed that this natural area is the second largest lung in the continent after the Amazon. "We are talking about 0.6 million hectares in the case of Belize, 2.7 million hectares in the case o…
While the eyes of the world were placed on Friday in the talks between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, further south three presidents signed what they consider a “historical agreement” to preserve the second largest rainforest on the American continent. President Claudia Sheinbaum signed a decree with her counterparts from Guatemala, Bernardo Arévalo, and Belize, Juan Briceño, to preserve 5.7 million hectares of tropical forest through the crea…
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