Life
| Apr 21, 2021

Sandals Foundation to plant 10,000 trees by June 2022

/ Our Today

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Sandals Foundation Ambassador Samantha McPherson (left) and teen volunteer Kayla Farquharson plant timber trees as part of conservation efforts to celebrate Earth Day 2019. The Sandals Foundation is intensifying its Caribbean conservation efforts by committing to planting 10,000 trees by June 2022.

To commemorate Earth Day on April 22, the Sandals Foundation – the philanthropic arm of Sandals Resorts International – is intensifying its Caribbean conservation efforts by committing to plant 10,000 trees by June 2022.

The effort forms part of a wider Caribbean Tree Planting Project coordinated by the Caribbean Philanthropic Alliance in collaboration with Trees That Feed Foundation, the Clinton Global Initiative, and other partners to plant one million trees across 14 Caribbean countries by June next year.

Over the last 12 years, the Sandals Foundation has engaged local schools, community groups, partners, team members, travel agents, and guests to plant more than 17,000 trees across the Caribbean.

This intensified tree planting mission, while taking on a more controlled approach in line with national COVID-19 protocols, will undoubtedly strengthen the region’s climate resilience as it empowers even more persons to take action in line with this year’s Earth Day theme to ‘Restore Our Earth’.

“Never before has it been more important to reinvest in the sustainability of our natural environment.”

Heidi Clarke, executive director at the Sandals Foundation

Through the efforts of environmental partners in each of the seven countries it currently operates, the Sandals Foundation will coordinate the planting of fruit trees, timber and mangroves to protect the terrestrial and coastal zones of the islands.

“Never before has it been more important to reinvest in the sustainability of our natural environment,” said Heidi Clarke, executive director at the Sandals Foundation.

“Our tourism product as a region, and the livelihoods of all Caribbean people are intricately linked to the health of the environment. It is therefore our duty to play our part to strengthen this amazing ecosystem,” she said.

In 2019 the leadership of the Caribbean Philanthropic Alliance recognised the need to accelerate specific activities to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.

Professor Rosalea Hamilton, chairperson for the Alliance, says planting trees was identified as a practical activity that could help mitigate the threat of climate change.

“Planting trees not only improves soil and water conservation, provide shade, store carbon, regulate temperature extremes, and improve the land’s capacity to adapt to climate change but also provide sustainable livelihoods for many in need. The environmental, economic and related social benefits are essential for Caribbean development.”

VISIT WEBSITE TO SUPPORT

The commitment from the Sandals Foundation, Hamilton said, “is a great example of corporate partnership and social responsibility in accelerating the achievement of SDGs in the Caribbean”.

Persons wishing to support the tree planting efforts can visit the Sandals Foundation website at www.sandalsfoundation.org and donate to the ‘Caribbean Tree Planting Project’. One hundred per cent of all funds donated will be directed towards purchasing seedlings and maintaining the plant sites to ensure tree survival.

The Sandals Foundation has an extensive record of environmental conservation efforts, establishing and managing two marine sanctuaries since 2013, supporting the operations of some 14 marine and forested areas across the Caribbean, and assisting the safe release of more than 100,000 sea turtles into the Caribbean Sea.

By training local residents within fishing communities as environmental wardens and coral gardeners, the philanthropic organisation has out planted more than 8,000 coral fragments from their established coral nurseries. They have mobilised students and community groups to collect close to 60,000 lbs of solid waste and helped raise environmental awareness for close to 40,000 people.

The foundation is also working very closely with the Ministry of Education in The Bahamas and the Bahamas National Trust to develop the island’s very first environmentally focused component of its National Primary Science Curriculum to improve the environmental literacy of students and by extent, the future citizenry in that country.

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