On the cold, wet and foggy slopes of the Andes mountains in South America, a unique but fragile ecosystem illustrates the interconnection between the three most urgent global environmental crises we face today: biodiversity loss, climate change and land degradation. Known as ±èá°ù²¹³¾´Ç²õ&²Ô²ú²õ±è;(alpine tundras), these high mountain ecosystems are found at altitudes higher than 3,000 metres. Considered sacred by Indigenous Peoples, the ±èá°ù²¹³¾´Ç²õ of the Andes have been inhabited by humans for the past 15,000 years. However, with over 76,000 families living in the Colombian ±èá°ù²¹³¾´Ç²õ&²Ô²ú²õ±è;today, unsustainable development has been pressuring this invaluable and delicate ecosystem. That is why the (GEF) Small Grants Programme (SGP), implemented by the (UNDP), launched the Guardians of the ±Êá°ù²¹³¾´Ç²õ alliance, in partnership with SWISSAID and World Women’s Corporation Colombia. Over the project’s three years of implementation, a total of 2,328 people participated, most of them rural women.