Gonzalo Castro de la Mata

Gonzalo Castro de la Mata
Born Gonzalo Castro de la Mata Valdivia
Lima, Peru
Occupation Biodiversity, Climate Change, Global Environment, International Development, Accountability, Business, Non-Profit

Gonzalo Castro de la Mata (full name Gonzalo Castro de la Mata Valdivia) is a Peruvian Ecologist born in 1961 in Lima, Peru. He is the son of Ramiro Castro de la Mata y Caamaño and Elsa Valdivia Vargas. He is recognized as a global leader in the promotion of sustainability with emphasis on innovative free market solutions to environmental issues. [1][2][3]

Education

He received a Ph.D. in Ecology and Population Biology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1988, and M.Sc. (1985) in Biophysics and B.Sc. (1983) in Biology degrees from Cayetano Heredia University in Lima, Peru.

Professional Experience

In his early career, he published widely on the ecology and energetics of long distance migration, with emphasis on migratory shorebirds. Some seminal papers include "Assimilation Efficiency of Sanderlings (Calidris alba) Feeding on Horseshoe Crab (Limulus polyphemus) Eggs" and "Ecology and Energetics of Sandlerlings Migrating to Four Latitudes."

He is the founder of Ecosystem Services LLC, a company that generates carbon offsets through avoiding deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest REDD).[4][5] Previously, he was the Managing Director of Sustainable Forestry Management (SFM) for the Americas, where he was responsible for seminal investments that generated the first carbon credits from native plantations and forest conservation. He has been the Head of Biodiversity at the Global Environment Facility, the largest source of funds to address global environmental challenges, and a Lead Environmental Specialist at the World Bank. He was also Director and Vice-President of WWF’s Latin American and Caribbean Program in Washington, founder and CEO of Wetlands for the Americas, among other roles.

In 2013, he was one of the two high-level independent international experts engaged by the United Nations to assess the social end ecological impacts of the Barro Blanco Dam in Panama, which found serious consultation deficiencies in indigenous communities.[6]

In December 2013 he was selected as a Member of the World Bank's Inspection Panel and in November 2014 became its eleventh Chairman.[7]

Academic Activities, Advisory Positions, Non-Profit Boards, and Prizes

Chair of the Independent Advisory Panel on Development Issues in South-Central Peru,[8] as well as President of various companies and a Member of the Supervisory Council of Wetlands International.

Numerous publications in topics related to ecology, environment, mining, and development and is regular editorial contributor[9] to El Comercio in Lima, Peru and Diario Altavoz.[10]

in 2014, he was awarded the Prize "Peruanos al Bicentenario" (Bicentennial Prize) by Diario El Comercio in the Environmental Category for his Essay "Pais de Leyenda"

Selected Books and Publications

Napoleon's Last Interview. People's, Spaces, Deliberation. The World Bank. 2015.

Pais de Leyenda. 2015. Diario El Comercio.

Un Mendigo Sentado Sobre un Banco de Oro: Reflexiones sobre Desarrollo y Medio Ambiente en el Peru. 2005. 102 Pp., Lima, Peru.[11]

La Agenda Ambiental para el 2013. El Comercio. Enero 9, 2013.

Seeking Opportunities from New Patterns in Global Trade. Pages 10–14 in: Sustainability Report 2010. Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), Washington, DC.[12]

Conservation Financing in Latin America and the Caribbean: The Long Road to Sustainability. 2002. WWF, Washington, DC.

Mapping Conservation Investments: An Assessment of Biodiversity Funding in Latin America and the Caribbean. 2001. Biodiversity Support Program, Washington, DC. 80 Pp.

The Global Water Crisis and Freshwater Ecosystem Conservation in Latin America and the Caribbean: Predicted Trends and Proposed Policy Responses. 1997. World Wildlife Fund, Washington, DC, 80 Pp.

References

  1. Castro de la Mata, Gonzalo (June 11, 2012). "Propiedad Privada y Manejo Forestal". El Comercio, Lima Peru.
  2. Tegel, Simon (February 1, 2012). "REDD: The Amazon Carbon Cowboys". Global Post. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  3. De La Puente, Lorenzo. "Conservacion y Propiedad". El Derecho no Basta. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  4. "Peruvians Hope Nested Approach Today Will Halt Deforestation Tomorrow". Ecosystem Marketplace. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  5. Burger, Andrew (August 13, 2009). "International Group Garners First Voluntary Carbon Offsets for Reforesting Peruvian Amazon with Native Species". Global Warming is Real. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  6. http://www.undp.org.pa/centro-informacion/comunicados/en-cumplimiento-a-los-acuerdos-de-la-mesa-tecnica-de-dialogo-expertos-internacionales-presentan-resultados-del-peritaje-independiente-al-proyecto-hidroelectrico-barro-blanco/62
  7. http://ewebapps.worldbank.org/apps/ip/Lists/PanelMember/MeetthePanelDisp.aspx?ID=30&Source=/apps/ip/Pages/MeetthePanel.aspx
  8. "Ex-Im Bank establishes advisory panel on impact of south central Peru development". Andina Agencia de Noticias. May 9, 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  9. Castro de la Mata, Gonzalo. "Ecologismo Racional". Diario El Comercio. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  10. http://altavoz.pe/columnista/?c=44
  11. Castro de la Mata, Gonzalo (2005). Un Mendigo Sentado en un Banco de Oro: Reflexiones Sobre Desarrollo y Medio Ambiente en el Peru. Lima, Peru: Wust Ediciones. ISBN 9972-9094-8-4.
  12. Castro de la Mata, Gonzalo (2011). Seeking Opportunities from New Patterns in Global Trade. Washington, DC: Inter American Development Bank.
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