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Colombia Reforests Conflict Zones After Peace Agreement

Colombia reforested 180,000 hectares in former FARC zones through the Bosques de Paz program, reducing deforestation by 62% in the benefited areas.
Rural communities planting trees in a reforestation zone in Caquetá, Colombia

Rural communities planting trees in a reforestation zone in Caquetá, Colombia

Pablo Arroyo Vidal | Quito, Ecuador
2 min read | Last Updated: Apr 07 2026 | 9:00 AM IST
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Bogotá: Colombia is turning zones previously controlled by the FARC into forests. Ten years after the signing of the Peace Agreement, the Bosques de Paz program has managed to reforest more than 180,000 hectares in the regions of Caquetá, Putumayo, and Meta, areas where the guerrilla kept deforestation controlled to prevent state entry and which paradoxically became some of the most deforested in the country after the agreement, when settlers and loggers entered the power vacuum.

The program, funded with resources from the Peace and Nature Fund, combines reforestation with payment for environmental services to rural communities. Beneficiaries receive between 800,000 and 1.2 million pesos per month for guarding and restoring forests, transforming from potential deforesters into ecosystem guardians.

Verifiable Results

Satellite images processed by the Institute of Hydrology, Meteorology, and Environmental Studies (IDEAM) show a significant recovery of forest cover in the departments where the program operates. Deforestation in these areas fell 62% between 2022 and 2025, compared to the national average.

The forest recovery has important co-benefits: regulation of water basins that supply intermediate cities, carbon capture that Colombia offers to international credit markets, and biodiversity recovery in one of the world's megadiverse countries.

Pending Challenges

The program faces long-term challenges. Pressure for agricultural land, driven by growing food demand and the lack of land reform, generates permanent incentives for deforestation. And the presence of FARC dissidents and the ELN in some areas complicates program implementation by civil operators.

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