
Mangrove forests are essential coastal ecosystems that protect shorelines from erosion, provide nursery habitat for fish and marine species, store carbon and support local livelihoods. However, decades of unsustainable land use and limited alternative income opportunities have weakened the resilience of the Maputo National Park’s mangroves and reduced community engagement in conservation.
TUI Forest Mozambique tackles these challenges by restoring more than 150 hectares of degraded mangrove habitat through the planting of over 500,000 mangrove trees. The project brings together the TUI Care Foundation, local communities and Peace Parks Foundation, whose expertise in landscape-scale conservation and community engagement is guiding the restoration and sustainability efforts.
In addition to ecological restoration, the project supports local communities living around the national park by strengthening environmental education and expanding nature-based tourism opportunities. Teachers and environmental club leaders from schools in the park’s buffer zone will receive training and resources in conservation practices at the Community Training Centre in the Park, whilst upgrades to school facilities in one of the most marginalised communities in the southwest buffer zone, will improve learning environments and broaden access to environmental learning for young people.
To help local families benefit from the park’s natural assets, TUI Forest Mozambique is also creating four community-based enterprises in the coastal areas of Santa Maria and Ponta do Ouro. These small nature-based tourism activities will help diversify income sources, strengthen economic participation, and encourage stewardship of the surrounding ecosystems. Improvements in tourism infrastructure are planned, including the installation of a 200-metre mangrove walkway with interpretive signage and visitor facilities to foster learning and appreciation of the mangrove system.
The initiative reflects the Foundation’s commitment to large-scale conservation within the TUI Forests programme, which has already helped plant five million trees globally and supports community-driven forest restoration. By coupling ecosystem restoration with job creation, environmental education and visitor experiences, TUI Forest Mozambique aims to strengthen the long-term resilience of Maputo National Park and the communities that depend on it.
TUI Forest Mozambique is supported by the Tourism for Development Fund, which was launched by the TUI Care Foundation in collaboration with UN Tourism to support the sustainable development of tourism in Least Developed Countries (LDCs). Mobilising at least €10 million by 2030, the Fund supports projects designed to increase the capacity of destination communities, and which will improve their livelihoods, conserve and regenerate nature, and create market-based solutions that benefit communities in tourism destinations. Alongside Mozambique, targeted LDCs include Cambodia, Laos, Rwanda, Senegal, The Gambia, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia.
The TUI Care Foundation's ‘Forest February’ is a month of activities dedicated to reforestation. Through a series of project launches and educational activities, it emphasises the importance of community-managed reforestation solutions and sustainable agro-forestry tourism practices to safeguard forest ecosystems for local communities and generations to come.
Building on the potential of tourism as a force for good, the TUI Care Foundation supports and initiates projects which create new opportunities and contribute to thriving communities in tourism destinations all over the world. Connecting holidaymakers to good causes, it supports education and training opportunities for young people; drives the protection of natural habitats and the marine environment; and helps local communities to thrive sustainably and benefit from tourism. The TUI Care Foundation builds on strong partnerships with local and international organisations to create meaningful and long-lasting impact. The independent charitable organisation was founded by TUI, one of the world's leading tourism businesses, and is based in the Netherlands. Website: www.tuicarefoundation.com
Founded in 1997 by President Nelson Mandela, HRH Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands and Dr. Anton Rupert, Peace Parks Foundation is a leading non-profit organisation pioneering conservation at scale across southern Africa.
Working through Transfrontier Conservation Areas that span national borders, Peace Parks reconnects ecosystems, strengthens local economies, and helps secure the natural assets on which communities depend. Its holistic approach focuses on three pillars: conservation at scale, community development, and commercial sustainability, ensuring that protected areas deliver long-term ecological and economic value.
To date, Peace Parks has helped governments protect more than 780,000 km², co-manages parks where wildlife populations have rebounded fivefold, and supports over 500,000 people through nature-based livelihoods each year. With formal government mandates and strong community partnerships, Peace Parks offers a proven model for building resilience for both people and nature across southern Africa’s most iconic landscapes.
The Foundation’s Vision 2050 is to secure 18 fully functional transboundary landscapes spanning 980,000 km², making it one of the world’s largest land-conservation initiatives.
Website: https://www.peaceparks.org/