To preserve the Sacred Headwaters of the Amazon, the ambitious project, presented on the sidelines of COP26 in November 2021, plans to ensure and extend the autonomy, land and resource rights of indigenous communities over forest land. To that end, it seeks to negotiate for and procure land deeds and titles for 22 million acres in indigenous territories, thereby promoting tribal management in these areas. These proposed actions are centred on the belief that indigenous ownership of forest land indigenous land-use patterns and strategies are the best ways to preserve forest ecosystems and biodiversity. The plan also calls for a complete stop to deforestation, mining, logging, and oil and gas extraction across the Amazon jungles in the two countries. In the process, it proposes to dismantle the current, exploitative, economic model of development and replace it with an ecological one based on sustainable entrepreneurship, community tourism and indigenous concepts of well-being. These constructive measures are expected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the Amazon by more than 2 billion metric tons.