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News

Indigenous Leaders Demand Amazon ‘Life Zones’ to Protect Rainforest as Oil Plans Advance

By Matthias Binder May 11, 2026
Indigenous groups warn Amazon oil expansion tests fossil fuel phase-out coalition
Indigenous groups warn Amazon oil expansion tests fossil fuel phase-out coalition - Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
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Indigenous groups warn Amazon oil expansion tests fossil fuel phase-out coalition

Contents
Frustration at the Santa Marta SummitConcrete Oil Projects Already UnderwayScience, Economics and the Production GapWhat Exclusion Zones Would Mean in Practice

Indigenous groups warn Amazon oil expansion tests fossil fuel phase-out coalition – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)

Indigenous representatives from across the Amazon basin returned from an international conference in Colombia with a clear message: new oil drilling in their territories is already undermining efforts to move the world away from fossil fuels. The gathering in Santa Marta brought together roughly 60 nations to map out practical steps for ending reliance on coal, oil and gas, yet the final report left out the one measure Indigenous delegates said mattered most. Without permanent barriers against extraction in the rainforest, they warned, the entire transition process risks losing both scientific credibility and moral force. The stakes are immediate for communities whose lands sit at the center of renewed interest in Amazon oil reserves.

Frustration at the Santa Marta Summit

Delegates had arrived with a concrete proposal: create legally protected “Life Zones” that would permanently exclude oil and gas development from Indigenous territories and the most biodiverse stretches of the rainforest. The idea was presented as a straightforward way to align government policy with both climate science and traditional knowledge. Instead, the synthesis document produced by Colombia and the Netherlands omitted any reference to these exclusion zones. Patricia Suárez of the Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the Colombian Amazon described the omission as urgent, noting that without such safeguards the conference could amount to little more than good intentions disconnected from reality on the ground.

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The absence of the proposal left many participants questioning whether the coalition can maintain legitimacy while some member countries continue to open new oil frontiers. Indigenous leaders pointed out that roughly one-fifth of all newly identified global oil reserves between 2022 and 2024 lie inside the Amazon basin, a concentration that has revived commercial interest just as scientists warn the rainforest is approaching irreversible tipping points.

Concrete Oil Projects Already Underway

In Ecuador, the government has moved forward with auctions for new oil blocks inside the rainforest, with President Daniel Noboa publicly promoting the region as a fresh source of production. A coalition of seven Indigenous nations from that country issued its own declaration at the conference, highlighting the contradiction between global transition talks and domestic policy. Marcelo Mayancha, president of the Shiwiar nation, stated that while the world discusses energy shifts, his government is actively expanding drilling in ancestral lands that communities have defended for generations.

Peru, which did not attend the Santa Marta meeting, is preparing to auction blocks in the Yavarí-Tapiche corridor along the Brazilian border, an area known for the highest concentration of Indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation. Brazil, a participant in the talks and host of the upcoming COP30 climate summit, is simultaneously advancing major new exploration, including offshore work by state-controlled Petrobras near the mouth of the Amazon River in Amapá state. These parallel tracks have created visible tension between stated climate goals and actual investment decisions.

Science, Economics and the Production Gap

Veteran Brazilian climate scientist Carlos Nobre has argued that continued exploration makes little sense given clear evidence that no new fossil-fuel projects can be developed without pushing the planet past dangerous thresholds. He noted that Petrobras remains one of Brazil’s largest exporters, creating strong economic pressure that often overrides climate considerations. The country’s own production targets, detailed in last year’s Production Gap report, show one of the largest planned increases in oil output worldwide, a trajectory that directly overlaps with Indigenous territories.

Luene Karipuna of Brazil’s coalition of Amazon peoples described how these projects arrive without meaningful consultation, leaving communities to deal with the resulting environmental changes. She emphasized that exclusion zones are not merely a regional request but a necessary first step if any global transition is to place Indigenous knowledge and rights at its center.

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What Exclusion Zones Would Mean in Practice

Supporters of the Life Zones concept see them as a practical legal tool that could be adopted by individual governments or incorporated into international agreements. The zones would apply to both active Indigenous territories and areas inhabited by peoples in voluntary isolation, creating clear boundaries that companies and state agencies could not cross. Such measures would also address the growing scientific consensus that protecting intact rainforest is essential for limiting global temperature rise.

Without these protections, Indigenous leaders fear the Santa Marta process will remain disconnected from the places where new fossil-fuel supply is actually being created. The outcome of the next round of negotiations, including Brazil’s promised voluntary roadmap ahead of COP31, will show whether governments are prepared to match their transition rhetoric with binding limits on Amazon extraction.

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