Climate-smart livelihoods
Entrepreneurship, village savings and loans, documentation, and seed capital help young people earn without increasing pressure on the forest.
TEG partners with youth in communities near the Eastern Arc Mountains, one of Earth's 36 biodiversity hotspots, to create livelihoods that make forest conservation economically viable.
The Eastern Arc Mountains have lost 70% of their vegetation. They supply 25% of Tanzania's freshwater and support over 151,000 people. However, local communities bear the cost of protecting these forests, often without economic alternatives. TEG aims to address this imbalance.
Entrepreneurship, village savings and loans, documentation, and seed capital help young people earn without increasing pressure on the forest.
TEG supports restoration, community forest co-management, and conservation work embedded with local reserve priorities.
Community stories and biodiversity documentation strengthen advocacy, international nature campaigns, and conservation learning.
We work with institutional donors, volunteer organizations, conservation agencies, researchers, and local communities. Each partnership pathway is structured around clear outcomes, field reporting, and long-term conservation value.