A group of young environmentalists founded Diwö Ambiental with the goal of voluntarily supporting communities and improving the surrounding ecosystems.
Corporate Social Responsibility Pilot Plan. Enrichment and management of the urban tree population in Parque del Oeste, Trinidad, Alajuela. MicroVention-TERUMO.
National Volunteer Pilot Plan. Enrichment and management of the tree population in the parks of INVU-1, MicroVention-TERUMO. Forest enrichment and arboriculture process Cristal-FIFCO-MOPT.
Bosque Cristal, Boruca Indigenous Community. Cristal-FIFCO. International Volunteer Pilot Plan Boruca Indigenous Community. Corporate Volunteering TechData, Boruca Indigenous Community. CEMEX-TEC Award.
Pilot Plan for Rehabilitation of Interurban Biological Corridors, Municipality of San José. Support for the restoration process of El Chayote Protected Zone, Raíces and Fundación de Asadas de Occidente.
Project 'Employability of Women and Youth in Sustainable Green Businesses', Boruca, Palmar Sur communities. PISCCA Fund, Embassy of France in Costa Rica. Connection with Térraba, Curré, and Cabagra.
Spaces for collective construction and capacity building in which people from the indigenous peoples of the south-east of Costa Rica (Brunka region) meet to exchange through participatory workshops facilitated by the Diwö team, on ancestral environmental practices typical of their peoples. and cultures that promote the restoration of the forest landscape and human-ecosystem coexistence, carried out from a human rights and gender approach, which allows each of the linked communities to improve their cultural relationship with nature.
In 2022, Diwö begins its insertion process into the Voluntary Carbon Markets, through the Ecosystem Restoration Standard platform, being endorsed as project developers to accompany and advise allied communities in obtaining certification for their farms, in which restoration activities will be carried out, for which their owners will be fairly compensated economically for carbon capture. It is estimated that under this methodology, 1,200 hectares of the Brunca region of Costa Rica will be restored.