Inside Panama’s gamble to save the Darién

    Founder’s Briefs: An occasional series where Mongabay founder Rhett Ayers Butler shares analysis, perspectives and story summaries.

    In the dense, humid expanse of the Darién Gap — a forbidding swath of rainforest bridging Panama and Colombia — a tentative transformation is underway. Once synonymous with lawlessness and unchecked migration, this biologically rich frontier is now the focus of an ambitious conservation push by Panama’s government, reports Mongabay’s Maxwell Radwin.

    Since President José Mulino took office last July, Panama has poured resources into the region. The Ministry of Environment, in partnership with NGOs like Global Conservation, has trained and deployed 30 new guards to Darién National Park, increasing the total to 52. Equipped with Starlink satellite communications, smartphones and GPS mapping tools, the rangers now cover more terrain than ever before.

    “We now have more equipment, more personnel, and we can cover more area,” said Segundo Sugasti, director of the park.

    These steps are part of a broader campaign to regain control over a region long shaped by external pressures: migration, illegal logging, gold mining, and land grabbing for agriculture. This year alone, two major raids by SENAFRONT, a militarized police unit, dismantled illegal gold mining camps that had generated millions in profits while polluting waterways with mercury and phosphorus.

    Meanwhile, efforts to regulate logging are showing signs of traction. A moratorium on new timber permits, extended through 2029, has silenced many sawmills in the province. Dozens of forest technicians, many of them recent graduates, have been dispatched to remote Indigenous communities to revise management plans, boost oversight, and help locals seek Forest Stewardship Council certification.

    “The management plan is supposed to serve both environmental and social goals,” said Elsy Ortiz, a forest technician working with the Emberá-Wounaan people.

    Infrastructure projects, such as new bridges and roads, are a double-edged sword. They promise life-changing access to hospitals and schools, but also draw settlers and industry. The Pan-American Highway, long interrupted by the Darién Gap, still ends at Yaviza. But smaller road extensions and a $70 million investment could bring the frontier closer to fragile forest boundaries.

    The threats remain potent. Timber traffickers exploit knowledge gaps in Indigenous communities. Farmers and ranchers clear forest illegally on private land. And nearly 300,000 metric tons of waste left behind by migrants pollute ecosystems and watersheds. Yet officials remain cautiously optimistic.

    “They told us about this in our training,” said park guard Edwin Cerrud. “We’re prepared to face the situation that’s coming our way.”

    Read the full story by Maxwell Radwin here.

    Banner image: The Geoffroy’s Tamarin can be found in the Darién rainforest. Image by Concep Arroyo via Pexels.

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