This project is not accepting donations yet. Explore the story, places, and evidence — or follow ChangeFusion Institute for updates.
Forests Are Burning — But Communities Are Standing Their Ground
Every dry season in Thailand, smoke blankets entire cities. Schools close. Hospitals fill with patients suffering from respiratory illness. Millions of people breathe hazardous PM2.5 pollution, often without realizing that much of the crisis begins far upstream — in forests. Every year, more than 800,000 hectares of forest area in Thailand are burned.
Thailand still has over 16 million hectares of forest (100 million Rai), yet protecting such a vast landscape cannot rely on government authorities alone. Wildfires increasingly spread faster and more intensely due to prolonged drought, rising temperatures, and climate instability. Forest communities — often living in remote mountainous areas — have become the true frontline defenders against disaster.
Long before the world talked about climate resilience, these communities had already been protecting forests with their own hands.
They patrol forests at night, create firebreaks across steep mountain ridges, monitor illegal burning, restore degraded land, and work together to prevent wildfires from spreading. Many do this voluntarily, year after year, with very limited support, despite the fact that their work directly protects clean air, water security, biodiversity, and climate stability for millions of people living downstream.
Yet too often, the people protecting forests receive the least support.
That is why Forest Guardians exists.
Forest Guardians is a collaborative initiative that supports local communities to become long-term stewards of forests through practical tools, knowledge, funding, and scientific monitoring. Rather than seeing local communities as passive beneficiaries, we recognize them as skilled environmental custodians whose local wisdom, relationships with the land, and everyday commitment are essential to safeguarding ecosystems.
Our approach combines community leadership, traditional ecological knowledge, and modern science.
We support communities with equipment for wildfire prevention and response — including firebreak tools, high-powered leaf blowers, protective gear, communication systems, CCTV, and wildlife camera traps. Communities also receive training to strengthen wildfire preparedness, improve coordination, and reduce risks to both forests and volunteers.
But protecting forests cannot rely on emergency response alone.
Forest Guardians also invests in community livelihoods linked to conservation. We support local communities to develop sustainable economic opportunities such as regenerative tourism, non-burning agriculture, forest-friendly products, shade-grown coffee and tea, and nature-based livelihoods that help communities generate income while keeping forests standing.
When communities can sustain themselves economically, forests become more resilient too.
At the same time, we work with local partner organizations, universities, and researchers to ensure impacts can be measured scientifically. Satellite monitoring, NDVI forest health analysis, burn scar detection, drones, biodiversity monitoring, and ecological assessments are used to track changes in forest conditions and wildfire risks.
This creates a model where support for communities is linked to real ecological outcomes — helping donors see how local action contributes to measurable environmental impact.
And it works.
In 2024, Forest Guardians piloted support in communities near Doi Suthep–Pui National Park in Chiang Mai. Through organized wildfire prevention, stronger firebreak systems, and community preparedness, participating communities reduced burned areas by over 70% compared to the previous year.
By 2025, in several communities, forest hotspots dropped dramatically. Areas once damaged by degradation began showing signs of recovery. Wildlife returned to restored habitats. In Saraburi, wildlife cameras captured rare species such as the clouded leopard and serow, confirming that healthier community forests can become critical ecological corridors between fragmented habitats.
In places like Huai Pla Lod, communities restored watershed systems, improved forest moisture, and developed forest-compatible livelihoods that reduced pressure on surrounding ecosystems. In Doi Chang Pa Pae, Indigenous Karen youth blended traditional fire management knowledge with modern tools such as IoT water-springer systems to create community-wide wildfire protection systems.
These stories remind us that forests survive when communities survive.
In 2026, Forest Guardians aims to expand support to 25 community forest networks across Northern Thailand and Saraburi, strengthening local wildfire prevention, ecological restoration, and sustainable livelihoods at a much larger scale.
The project will help communities:
Our target is to reduce wildfire impacts in participating areas by at least 30% compared to previous years, while helping communities protect more than 40,000 rai of forest landscapes.
But this project is about more than stopping fires.
It is about recognizing that forests are not protected by institutions alone. They are protected by people — grandparents, youth volunteers, Indigenous communities, farmers, and neighbors who choose to care for the places they call home.
When you support Forest Guardians, you are not simply funding equipment.
You are helping communities safeguard forests that provide clean air, water, biodiversity, and climate resilience for all of us.
In many ways, this is an investment in something we often take for granted:
The forests quietly protect our future.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.