Supporting communities, protecting nature

 
 
 

At Conservation International-Cambodia, we believe that when nature thrives, people thrive. Our mission is rooted in the understanding that protecting Cambodia’s unique biodiversity is not only about saving species like the pangolin, giant barb fish, or northern yellow-cheeked crested gibbon—it’s about securing the future of communities who depend on them.

Sony Oum
Country Director, Conservation International-Cambodia

 
 

Since 2001, Conservation International-Cambodia's groundbreaking science, community-led partnerships and fieldwork have helped protect Cambodia's rich natural capital.

We focus primarily on forests and fisheries, working with local communities and government to reduce deforestation and protect wildlife, improve the management of wetlands, promote sustainable agricultural and develop innovative funding sources to drive conservation.

In Cambodia’s Central Cardamom Mountains, one of Southeast Asia’s most intact and ecologically rich landscapes, we work with the Indigenous Chourng and Por communities to protect wildlife habitats and support sustainable livelihoods. We're working to improve the management of fisheries along the mighty Mekong River, and we're helping communities in the Prey Lang forest make rice production sustainable. And in the Veun Sai-Siem Pang National Park, we created an ecotourism program to benefit local communities and finance the protection of an endangered species of gibbon.

 

Highlight project

© Kristin Harrison & Jeremy Ginsberg

Improving livelihoods and protecting nature in Tonle Sap

The Tonle Sap Lake in central Cambodia is the largest freshwater lake in Southeast Asia, and home to many species of endangered plants and animals.

The lake also supports numerous villages that float on the water's surface. In fact, more than a million Cambodians depend on the lake and its surrounding forests for food, fresh water and livelihoods. Fish provide Cambodians with most of their animal protein. And, for those living on Tonle Sap, it's their main source of revenue — from selling products like smoked fish and fish paste.

But deforestation and overfishing have taken their toll on the lake, depleting fish stocks and driving many villagers into debt due to lost income.

That's where Conservation International-Cambodia comes in: We've developed a program to support fisheries and the families who depend on them. We help villagers find sustainable ways to catch and raise fish, and, using the latest science, identify the most productive locations for their fish farms. Additionally, we've helped Tonle Sap communities set up a communal savings fund, offering a safety net against lost revenue while fostering financial responsibility and greater economic freedom.

 

Where we work in Cambodia

 

News from Cambodia

Funding cuts leave a forest at risk

To protect an irreplaceable landscape, conservationists are now facing a steeper climb.

One of the world’s most important places for nature is a small strip of mountainous forest no more than about 40 miles wide.

And for want of a relatively small amount of money, its long-term health is in doubt.

Not many people have heard of Cambodia’s Cardamom Mountains, home to one of the last large areas of intact tropical forest in Southeast Asia. This unheralded mountain range pales in size to the rainforests of the Amazon or Central Africa, yet acre for acre, its value rivals nearly any terrestrial ecosystem on Earth.

Most notably, the Cardamoms pulse with rare wildlife: A recent survey of the region uncovered elephants, clouded leopards, pileated gibbons and more — a testament to how healthy the ecosystem remains despite recent pressures.

Unfortunately, those pressures are building.

As Cambodia has developed, these forests — once so inaccessible that they remained basically untouched for centuries — are no longer safe from illegal logging and poaching, revenues from which are known to fund human trafficking and the drug trade across Southeast Asia. The 22 communities in and around the Cardamoms that depend on the forest, meanwhile, are increasingly caught in the currents of global markets pushing them to convert these forests to lucrative plantations and logging.

So critical is this region for nature and people that Conservation International has been working there for decades — and is this close to fulfilling a commitment to secure forests there for decades more.

But whether this new project takes off or fizzles out could come down to, improbably, a modest sum of money.

Most of the project’s funding — about $15 million — has already been secured for the next 15 years, the project’s leaders say. The shortfall? About US$ 1 million over the next year, originally earmarked by the United States government and intended for a critical purpose: to help sign agreements with the 22 communities, including Chong and Por Indigenous groups, in the region to secure both their consent to the project and to their share of the project’s benefits. This funding is considered a critical bridge until carbon revenues begin to roll in.

U.S. funding has already benefited this area immeasurably. Take the story of Mon Phos.

The only female ranger patrolling the Central Cardamom Mountains National Park — a 4,000-square-kilometer (1,500-square-mile) protected area — Mon Phos (pronounced mawn poh) was hired seven years ago by the Cambodian government to help combat poaching and illegal logging in the area.

Because of the work of these rangers, poaching has declined. Local communities now join patrols instead of resisting them. And the benefits extend beyond the health of the forest: Thanks to her earnings as a ranger, Mon’s children can now go to school.

The benefits of U.S.-funded projects like these, in other words, have a multiplier effect: protecting nature, combating illegal activities, benefiting communities and rural livelihoods, and creating goodwill in a geopolitically crucial region — while helping to counter the influence of actors working against U.S. interests there.

Similarly, U.S. funding earmarked for this corner of Cambodia also has a multiplier effect, unlocking tens of millions of dollars more to establish programs that would provide financial and other incentives for the protection of forests like these — essentially making them more valuable alive than cut down.

With U.S. funding not likely to be restored, Conservation International is exploring how it can continue the project any way it can. The future of this unparalleled landscape — and the people within it — hang in the balance.

Bruno Vander Velde is the managing director of storytelling at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? Sign up for email updates. Also, please consider supporting our critical work.

 

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Hear directly from Conservation International employees on the ground in Cambodia.

 

References

  1. Fedele, G., Donatti, C. I., Bornacelly, I., & Hole, D. G. (2021). Nature-dependent people: Mapping human direct use of nature for basic needs across the tropics. ScienceDirect, 71. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102368
  2. Conservation International (2021, November). Irrecoverable Carbon. Retrieved January 2025, from https://www.conservation.org/projects/irrecoverable-carbon
  3. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. (2024). Table 8a: Total, threatened, and EX & EW endemic species in each country [Fact sheet]. https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/summary-statistics#Summary%20Tables