- Cheri Sugal
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Cheri Sugal (born January 27, 1971) is a U.S. environmental economist and has written several articles on conservation, for both popular and scientific audiences.
Contents
Biography
Sugal received her BA in Public Policy and Human Biology from Stanford University in 1993 and her MA in Agricultural Economics from Stanford University’s Food Research Institute in 1994.
She has worked in more than 40 countries mainly in tropical locations - including Guyana, Suriname, Congo,[disambiguation needed ] Gabon, Malawi, Mozambique, Fiji, Cambodia, Costa Rica and Mexico - helping to establish and strengthen protected areas. Sugal’s work has been focused on providing the financial resources needed to outbid logging and other development interests for the rights to intact rainforests and to implement on-going management. Her work has helped create more than 100,000,000 acres (400,000 km2) of newly protected rainforests, benefiting indigenous peoples, governments and local landowners.[1]
In 2004, Sugal was named Executive Director of Rainforest2Reef, a Tahoe based organization [2] that is protecting 350,000 acres (1,400 km2) of the Selva Maya Rainforest in the southern portion of Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula – by providing indigenous landowners an economic alternative to logging.[3] Her work was unprecedented – and has led to the protection of one of the last viable jaguar populations in Central America and 60,000 other species and the improvement of livelihoods of more than 300 indigenous families, and will prevent an estimated 3 million tons of carbon from entering the atmosphere over the next 30 years.
Sugal is currently a Director at Terra Global Capital, a San Francisco based company exclusively devoted to agriculture, forestry and other land-use (AFOLU) carbon markets. Sugal manages a pipeline of Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) projects in Africa and Latin America and is monetizing the avoided carbon emissions from reducing the deforestation and degradation of standing forests. Prior to Terra Global Capital and Rainforest2Reef, Sugal was the Executive Director of World Parks and Senior Director of the Global Conservation Fund at Conservation International (CI) where she helped create the one-hundred-million dollar Global Conservation Fund with funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
Publications
- with Conrad Aveling, J. Michael Fay, Rebecca Ham, Olivier Langrand, Lee White, John Hart, John Pilgrim and Russell Mittermeier. 2002. The Congo Forests of Central Africa in Mittermeier, Russell A. et al. Wilderness: Earth’s Last Wild Places. (Cemex).
- with Richard E. Rice, Shelley M. Ratay, and Gustavo A. Fonseca. 2001. Sustainable Forest Management: A Review of Conventional Wisdom. Advances in Applied Biodiversity Science, No. 3, p. 1-28. (Washington, DC: CABS/Conservation International).
- with Amy Rosenfeld-Sweeting, and Glenn T. Prickett. Promoting a Positive Net Benefit to Biodiversity from E&P Projects in Sensitive Ecosystems. 2000. Society of Petroleum Engineers.
- with Russell A. Mittermeier. Transnational Logging Investments in the Major Tropical Wilderness Areas: Recent Trends Provide Opportunities for Conservation. Summer 1999. CI Policy Brief. Number 2. (Washington D.C.: Conservation International).
- with Richard Rice, Peter C. Frumhoff, Elizabeth Losos, and Raymond Gullison. Options for Conserving Biodiversity in the Context of Logging Tropical Forests in Bowles, Ian and Glenn Prickett. 1998. Footprints in the Jungle (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
- with Ian A Bowles, Amy B. Rosenfeld, and Russell A. Mittermeier. Natural Resource Extraction in the Latin American Tropics: A Recent Wave of Investment Poses New Challenges for Biodiversity Conservation. Spring 1997. CI Policy Brief. Number 1. (Washington, D.C.: Conservation International).
- Elephants in Southern Africa Must Now Pay Their Way, World Watch Magazine, September/October 1997.
- The Price of Habitat, World Watch Magazine, May/June 1997.
- Most Forests Have No Protection, Most Forests Have No Protection, World Watch Magazine, January/February 1997.
- Labeling Wood: How Timber Certification May Reduce Deforestation, World Watch Magazine, September/October 1996.
- Roundwood Production Rises Again in Vital Signs 1997. (Washington, D.C.: Worldwatch Institute).
- "Forest Loss Continues" in Vital Signs 1997. (Washington, D.C.: Worldwatch Institute).
References
External links
Categories:- 1971 births
- Living people
- Environmental economists
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