# Peru

Country layer — v1.1

# Peru — Overview & CTH Presence

<table id="bkmrk-countryperu-iso_code"> <tr><td>**country**</td><td>Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**iso\_code**</td><td>PE</td></tr> <tr><td>**cth\_presence**</td><td>CLP cohorts (2022–2026) + REIN Hub Peru (active since 2024)</td></tr> <tr><td>**gf\_taxonomy**</td><td>None — gap documented</td></tr> <tr><td>**ndc\_target**</td><td>30% unconditional / 40% conditional GHG reduction by 2030 vs BAU</td></tr> <tr><td>**eudr\_commodities**</td><td>Coffee, Cacao, Wood, Cattle (partial — Amazon frontier)</td></tr> <tr><td>**schema\_version**</td><td>1.1</td></tr> <tr><td>**last\_updated**</td><td>2026-05-27</td></tr></table>

### Country Profile

Peru is CTH's second-deepest country engagement after Colombia. The REIN Hub Peru has been active since 2024, anchoring regional innovation networks across Lima, Cusco, and the selva alta coffee corridor. CLP cohorts have run continuously since 2022, producing startups focused on deforestation monitoring, sustainable agriculture, and rural energy access.

### Economy and Climate Context

Peru's economy is heavily resource-dependent: mining (copper, gold, zinc) accounts for over 60% of exports, while agriculture — particularly coffee and cacao — provides livelihoods for hundreds of thousands of smallholders in the Amazon basin. The country faces a dual climate challenge: accelerating deforestation in the Amazon lowlands (Ucayali, Madre de Dios, San Martín) and glacier retreat in the Andes that threatens water supply for Lima and coastal agriculture.

### CTH Engagement Summary

CTH's Peru footprint includes: (1) CLP cohorts spanning 4 annual cycles with approximately 35 startups supported across AFOLU, energy, and climate intelligence sectors; (2) REIN Hub Peru providing a permanent innovation node for cleantech entrepreneurs; (3) Sustenttia diagnostic platform deployed for Peruvian startups; (4) Data integration with SERNANP for Amazon deforestation monitoring use cases.

### EUDR Exposure

Peru has significant EUDR exposure across four commodities. Coffee production in Junín, San Martín, and Amazonas provinces is the largest export category subject to EUDR due diligence. Cacao from San Martín and Ucayali is the second-largest exposure. Timber from the Amazon basin (particularly Ucayali and Loreto) faces EU market access requirements. Cattle ranching along the Amazon frontier creates partial exposure, though at lower volumes than Brazil or Colombia.

```

{
  "country": "peru",
  "iso_code": "PE",
  "cth_clp": true,
  "cth_rein": true,
  "gf_taxonomy": false,
  "ndc_year": 2020,
  "eudr_commodities": ["coffee", "cacao", "wood", "cattle"],
  "schema_version": "1.1"
}
```

# Peru — Regulatory & Climate Framework

<table id="bkmrk-countryperu-iso_code"> <tr><td>**country**</td><td>Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**iso\_code**</td><td>PE</td></tr> <tr><td>**cth\_presence**</td><td>CLP cohorts + REIN Hub Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**gf\_taxonomy**</td><td>None — gap documented</td></tr> <tr><td>**ndc\_target**</td><td>30% unconditional / 40% conditional by 2030</td></tr> <tr><td>**eudr\_commodities**</td><td>Coffee, Cacao, Wood, Cattle</td></tr> <tr><td>**schema\_version**</td><td>1.1</td></tr> <tr><td>**last\_updated**</td><td>2026-05-27</td></tr></table>

### National Climate Law

Peru's Ley Marco de Cambio Climático (Ley 30754, enacted April 2018) establishes the legal framework for climate action. It mandates that all levels of government integrate climate change into planning and budgeting, creates the High-Level Commission on Climate Change (CANCC), and designates MINAM (Ministerio del Ambiente) as the primary coordinating authority. The law explicitly addresses both mitigation and adaptation with a focus on vulnerable populations.

### NDC Commitments

Peru's updated NDC (2020) commits to a 30% unconditional reduction in GHG emissions by 2030 relative to business-as-usual projections, increasing to 40% conditional on international finance and technology transfer. Key sectoral targets include: (1) LULUCF — reducing deforestation to net-zero by 2030 in priority regions; (2) Energy — increasing renewable share in the electricity mix to 15% from non-hydro sources; (3) Agriculture — reducing emissions intensity per unit of production through improved practices.

### Key Institutions

MINAM (Ministerio del Ambiente) is the primary climate authority. SERNANP (Servicio Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas) manages protected areas and Amazon monitoring. OSINFOR regulates forest concessions and timber legality. SERFOR (Servicio Nacional Forestal y de Fauna Silvestre) manages forest governance. MEF (Ministry of Economy and Finance) leads green bond and sustainable finance initiatives.

### Climate Plans and Strategies

PLANCC II (Plan de Acción Nacional de Cambio Climático) provides the operational roadmap for NDC implementation. The Plan de Acción en Género y Cambio Climático integrates gender considerations into climate policy. Peru's National Strategy on Forests and Climate Change (ENBCC) specifically targets deforestation reduction in the Amazon. The National Adaptation Plan (NAP) prioritizes water security, agriculture, and health.

### Relevant Regulatory Instruments

Decreto Supremo 013-2019-MINAM establishes the carbon market regulation framework. Peru participates in REDD+ through the Forest Investment Program (FIP) and the Green Climate Fund (GCF). The Huella de Carbono Perú program provides a voluntary corporate carbon footprint registry. Superintendencia del Mercado de Valores (SMV) has issued guidance on green bond issuance but no mandatory disclosure requirements yet.

```

{
  "country": "peru",
  "iso_code": "PE",
  "cth_clp": true,
  "cth_rein": true,
  "gf_taxonomy": false,
  "ndc_year": 2020,
  "eudr_commodities": ["coffee", "cacao", "wood", "cattle"],
  "schema_version": "1.1"
}
```

# Peru — Green Finance Taxonomy Alignment

<table id="bkmrk-countryperu-iso_code"> <tr><td>**country**</td><td>Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**iso\_code**</td><td>PE</td></tr> <tr><td>**cth\_presence**</td><td>CLP cohorts + REIN Hub Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**gf\_taxonomy**</td><td>None — gap documented</td></tr> <tr><td>**ndc\_target**</td><td>30% unconditional / 40% conditional by 2030</td></tr> <tr><td>**eudr\_commodities**</td><td>Coffee, Cacao, Wood, Cattle</td></tr> <tr><td>**schema\_version**</td><td>1.1</td></tr> <tr><td>**last\_updated**</td><td>2026-05-27</td></tr></table>

### Green Finance Taxonomy Status

Peru does not have a national green finance taxonomy as of May 2026. This represents a significant gap given Peru's role as the second-largest economy in the Andean region and its substantial green bond issuance history. Colombia's Taxonomía Verde (2022) remains the only binding national GF taxonomy in the Andean/Pacific Alliance bloc and serves as the nearest regional reference point for Peru.

### Gap Analysis

The absence of a Peruvian GF taxonomy creates three operational gaps for Origo: (1) No domestic activity classification to crosswalk against when assigning latam\_peru flags — requiring reliance on Colombia's taxonomy as a proxy combined with NDC priorities; (2) No standardized green bond eligibility criteria specific to Peru's LULUCF-heavy emissions profile; (3) No regulatory alignment pathway for Peruvian financial institutions seeking to classify their portfolios as "green" under domestic law.

### Nearest Equivalents

In the absence of a formal taxonomy, Peru relies on several proxy frameworks: (1) Colombia's Taxonomía Verde — applicable to many shared Andean commodities and sectors; (2) CBI (Climate Bonds Initiative) criteria — used for Peru's sovereign and corporate green bonds; (3) IFC Performance Standards — applied by development finance institutions operating in Peru; (4) EU Taxonomy — referenced by European importers of Peruvian commodities under EUDR compliance. The Origo taxonomy uses a combination of these to infer latam\_peru relevance flags.

### Development Prospects

SBS (Superintendencia de Banca, Seguros y AFP) issued Resolución 1928-2021 requiring financial institutions to integrate ESG risk into governance, which could serve as a foundation for taxonomy development. MEF has signaled interest in developing green finance guidelines as part of its sustainable finance roadmap. IDB and GCF technical assistance programs are supporting taxonomy-adjacent work in Peru's financial sector. A formal Peruvian GF taxonomy is estimated at 2–3 years from adoption.

```

{
  "country": "peru",
  "iso_code": "PE",
  "cth_clp": true,
  "cth_rein": true,
  "gf_taxonomy": false,
  "ndc_year": 2020,
  "eudr_commodities": ["coffee", "cacao", "wood", "cattle"],
  "schema_version": "1.1"
}
```

# Peru — CLP Cohort Data Summary

<table id="bkmrk-countryperu-iso_code"> <tr><td>**country**</td><td>Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**iso\_code**</td><td>PE</td></tr> <tr><td>**cth\_presence**</td><td>CLP cohorts + REIN Hub Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**gf\_taxonomy**</td><td>None — gap documented</td></tr> <tr><td>**ndc\_target**</td><td>30% unconditional / 40% conditional by 2030</td></tr> <tr><td>**eudr\_commodities**</td><td>Coffee, Cacao, Wood, Cattle</td></tr> <tr><td>**schema\_version**</td><td>1.1</td></tr> <tr><td>**last\_updated**</td><td>2026-05-27</td></tr></table>

### CLP Cohort History

Peru has participated in CLP (Cleantech Leadership Programme) cohorts from 2022 through 2026, making it one of CTH's most consistent country partners. REIN Hub Peru, active since 2024, provides ongoing mentoring and networking beyond the cohort cycle. The combination of CLP + REIN gives Peru the second-deepest CTH coverage after Colombia.

### Cohort Summary

<table id="bkmrk-yearstartupsprimary-"> <tr><th>Year</th><th>Startups</th><th>Primary Sectors</th><th>Notes</th></tr> <tr><td>2022</td><td>6</td><td>AF, EN</td><td>First Peru cohort; focus on coffee traceability and rural solar</td></tr> <tr><td>2023</td><td>8</td><td>AF, IC, EN</td><td>Expanded to include climate data/MRV startups</td></tr> <tr><td>2024</td><td>10</td><td>AF, IC, EN, XS</td><td>REIN Hub launched; carbon market entrants joined</td></tr> <tr><td>2025</td><td>7</td><td>AF, IC</td><td>EUDR-focused cohort; deforestation monitoring emphasis</td></tr> <tr><td>2026</td><td>4</td><td>AF, EN, IC</td><td>Current cohort; Amazon sustainability focus</td></tr></table>

### Sector Distribution

Across all Peru cohorts, sector distribution is: AFOLU (45%) — driven by coffee, cacao, and deforestation monitoring; Energy (25%) — rural electrification, solar, and small hydropower; Climate Intelligence (20%) — MRV platforms, earth observation, and supply chain traceability; Carbon/Offsets (10%) — REDD+ project developers and carbon accounting platforms.

### Key Outcomes

Notable outcomes from Peru CLP cohorts include: 3 startups that secured post-cohort investment exceeding $500K; 2 partnerships with SERNANP for Amazon monitoring technology deployment; 1 startup integrated into the Origo platform data pipeline for EUDR compliance services; establishment of REIN Hub Peru as a permanent cleantech innovation node in Lima.

```

{
  "country": "peru",
  "iso_code": "PE",
  "cth_clp": true,
  "cth_rein": true,
  "gf_taxonomy": false,
  "ndc_year": 2020,
  "eudr_commodities": ["coffee", "cacao", "wood", "cattle"],
  "schema_version": "1.1"
}
```

# Peru — Taxonomy Node Mapping

<table id="bkmrk-countryperu-mapping_"> <tr><td>**country**</td><td>Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>**mapping\_type**</td><td>taxonomy\_node\_mapping</td></tr> <tr><td>**schema\_version**</td><td>1.1</td></tr></table>

### Node Mapping Summary

Peru's taxonomy node mapping reflects its Amazon-heavy EUDR exposure, its strong AFOLU sector relevance (coffee, cacao, timber, partial cattle), emerging energy transition needs, and its role as a key site for AI/MRV deforestation monitoring. All AFOLU base nodes with coffee, cacao, or wood EUDR flags are tagged Y. Energy nodes are tagged partial reflecting Peru's hydropower-dominant grid with nascent solar/wind growth. IC nodes for Amazon monitoring and MRV are tagged Y.

### AFOLU Nodes

<table id="bkmrk-node-idlabellatam_pe"> <tr><th>Node ID</th><th>Label</th><th>latam\_peru</th><th>Rationale</th></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-001</td><td>Land &amp; Soil</td><td>Y</td><td>Critical for soil management in coffee/cacao regions of Junín and San Martín</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-002</td><td>Forests &amp; Woodlands</td><td>Y</td><td>Amazon deforestation is Peru's largest emissions source; shade-grown coffee agroforestry</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-003</td><td>Oceans &amp; Water</td><td>Y</td><td>Water management in coffee processing (beneficio húmedo); El Niño coastal impacts</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-004</td><td>Ice &amp; Snow</td><td>Y</td><td>Andean glacier retreat directly threatens Lima's water supply and highland agriculture</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-005</td><td>Air &amp; Atmosphere</td><td>partial</td><td>Limited direct relevance; air quality monitoring in Lima and mining regions</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-006</td><td>Smart Farming</td><td>Y</td><td>Precision agriculture for smallholder coffee and cacao in selva alta</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-007</td><td>Livestock &amp; Fisheries</td><td>partial</td><td>Cattle frontier in Amazon (partial EUDR); anchovy fisheries climate-sensitive</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-008</td><td>Crops</td><td>Y</td><td>Coffee, cacao, and quinoa are major export crops with climate vulnerability</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-009</td><td>Alternative Meat &amp; Seafood</td><td>N</td><td>Minimal market presence in Peru</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-AF-010</td><td>Alternative Dairy &amp; Egg</td><td>N</td><td>Minimal market presence in Peru</td></tr></table>

### Energy Nodes

<table id="bkmrk-node-idlabellatam_pe-1"> <tr><th>Node ID</th><th>Label</th><th>latam\_peru</th><th>Rationale</th></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-001</td><td>Critical Minerals</td><td>Y</td><td>Peru is a top-5 global producer of copper, zinc, silver — essential for energy transition</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-002</td><td>Hydrogen</td><td>partial</td><td>Green hydrogen pilots in southern coastal desert; early stage</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-003</td><td>Nuclear</td><td>N</td><td>No nuclear energy program</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-004</td><td>Bio &amp; Synthetic Fuels</td><td>partial</td><td>Biodiesel from palm oil in San Martín; small scale</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-005</td><td>Fossil Fuels (Transition)</td><td>partial</td><td>Camisea gas field transition planning; LNG export infrastructure</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-006</td><td>Solar</td><td>Y</td><td>Excellent irradiance in Arequipa, Tacna, Moquegua; rural off-grid solar in Amazon</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-007</td><td>Wind</td><td>partial</td><td>Ica and Piura wind corridors; 3 GW pipeline but slow permitting</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-008</td><td>Geothermal</td><td>partial</td><td>Volcanic Andes potential but no operating plants; exploration phase only</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-009</td><td>Biomass</td><td>partial</td><td>Coffee pulp and cacao husk biomass potential in selva alta</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-010</td><td>Hydro Tidal &amp; Wave</td><td>Y</td><td>Peru's grid is ~60% hydropower; critical dependency with glacier retreat risk</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-011</td><td>Batteries</td><td>partial</td><td>Lithium exploration in Puno; battery storage for grid stabilization</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-012</td><td>Alternative Storage</td><td>partial</td><td>Pumped hydro potential in Andes; early feasibility studies</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-013</td><td>Grids</td><td>partial</td><td>Grid modernization needed for renewable integration; SEIN interconnection gaps</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-014</td><td>EV Charging</td><td>partial</td><td>Lima EV adoption nascent; regulatory framework under development</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EN-015</td><td>Peer-to-Peer Energy</td><td>N</td><td>No regulatory framework for P2P energy trading</td></tr></table>

### Climate Intelligence &amp; Carbon Nodes

<table id="bkmrk-node-idlabellatam_pe-2"> <tr><th>Node ID</th><th>Label</th><th>latam\_peru</th><th>Rationale</th></tr> <tr><td>CT-IC-001</td><td>IoT &amp; Earth Observation</td><td>Y</td><td>SERNANP Amazon monitoring; satellite deforestation detection is core use case</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-IC-002</td><td>Climate Data</td><td>Y</td><td>SENAMHI climate data infrastructure; glacier monitoring networks</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-IC-003</td><td>Climate Finance</td><td>Y</td><td>Green bond issuance; GCF project pipeline; sovereign sustainability-linked bonds</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-IC-004</td><td>Climate Risk</td><td>Y</td><td>El Niño/La Niña exposure; flood risk in Amazon; drought in coastal agriculture</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-IC-005</td><td>Climate Insurance</td><td>partial</td><td>Parametric insurance pilots for smallholder coffee farmers; limited scale</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-XS-001</td><td>Carbon Capture &amp; Storage</td><td>N</td><td>No CCS projects or geological storage sites under development</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-XS-002</td><td>B2B Carbon Offsets &amp; Exchanges</td><td>Y</td><td>Amazon REDD+ project pipeline; voluntary carbon market activity</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-XS-003</td><td>B2C Carbon Offsets</td><td>partial</td><td>Tourism-linked offsets; limited domestic B2C market</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-XS-004</td><td>Carbon Intelligence</td><td>Y</td><td>Huella de Carbono Perú program; corporate carbon footprint registry</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-XS-005</td><td>Carbon Accounting</td><td>Y</td><td>MINAM greenhouse gas inventory system; REDD+ MRV requirements</td></tr></table>

### Waste, Built Environment &amp; Transport Nodes

<table id="bkmrk-node-idlabellatam_pe-3"> <tr><th>Node ID</th><th>Label</th><th>latam\_peru</th><th>Rationale</th></tr> <tr><td>CT-WA-001</td><td>Waste to Energy</td><td>partial</td><td>Pilot projects in Lima; coffee processing waste valorization potential</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-WA-002</td><td>Sustainable Materials</td><td>partial</td><td>Bamboo construction and bio-based materials from Amazon resources</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-WA-003</td><td>Textiles</td><td>partial</td><td>Alpaca and organic cotton supply chains with sustainability potential</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-WA-004</td><td>Recycling</td><td>partial</td><td>Lima municipal recycling expansion; informal sector formalization</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-WA-005</td><td>Solid Waste &amp; Water Waste</td><td>partial</td><td>Coffee processing wastewater (aguas mieles) treatment technology</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-BU-001</td><td>Construction</td><td>partial</td><td>Green building standards emerging in Lima; seismic resilience overlap</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-BU-002 to CT-BU-005</td><td>Built Environment (remaining)</td><td>partial</td><td>Urban sustainability nascent; transport infrastructure in expansion</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-TR-001 to CT-TR-005</td><td>Transport (all)</td><td>partial</td><td>Lima Metro expansion; EV policy under development; limited cleantech startup activity</td></tr></table>

### Extension Nodes

<table id="bkmrk-node-idlabellatam_pe-4"> <tr><th>Node ID</th><th>Label</th><th>latam\_peru</th><th>Rationale</th></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-001</td><td>Drought-resistant crop varieties and seed tech</td><td>Y</td><td>Critical for coastal agriculture under El Niño stress</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-002</td><td>Flood resilience infrastructure (nature-based)</td><td>Y</td><td>Amazon basin and coastal El Niño flooding</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-003</td><td>Heat adaptation for agriculture</td><td>Y</td><td>Coffee rust and heat stress moving upslope in Andes</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-004</td><td>Early warning systems for climate events</td><td>Y</td><td>El Niño early warning critical for agriculture and fisheries</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-005</td><td>Community-led reforestation and agroforestry</td><td>Y</td><td>Indigenous community forestry in Amazon; shade coffee agroforestry</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-006</td><td>Mangrove restoration and blue carbon</td><td>partial</td><td>Tumbes mangroves; limited compared to Caribbean nations</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-007</td><td>Silvopastoral systems</td><td>partial</td><td>Amazon cattle frontier; emerging silvopastoral pilots</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-008</td><td>Bioeconomy: non-timber forest products</td><td>Y</td><td>Brazil nut, camu camu, sacha inchi — Amazon bioeconomy</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-009</td><td>PES platforms</td><td>Y</td><td>REDD+ payments; Transferencias Directas Condicionadas program</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-010</td><td>Solar home systems and pico-solar</td><td>Y</td><td>Rural electrification in Amazon communities without grid access</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-011</td><td>Community biodigesters</td><td>partial</td><td>Highland livestock communities; limited scale</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-014</td><td>Remote sensing and satellite deforestation monitoring</td><td>Y</td><td>Core use case: SERNANP Amazon monitoring, GeoBosques platform</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-015</td><td>AI-powered carbon MRV</td><td>Y</td><td>REDD+ MRV requirements; growing CLP startup activity</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-016</td><td>Supply chain traceability platforms</td><td>Y</td><td>Coffee and cacao supply chain traceability for EUDR compliance</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-017</td><td>Precision agriculture data platforms</td><td>Y</td><td>Smallholder coffee/cacao precision agriculture</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-018</td><td>Deforestation-free certification services</td><td>Y</td><td>EUDR Article 9 compliance for coffee and cacao exporters</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-019</td><td>Supply chain due diligence platforms</td><td>Y</td><td>EUDR operator obligations for Peruvian exporters</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-020</td><td>Smallholder technical assistance for EUDR</td><td>Y</td><td>Hundreds of thousands of smallholder coffee farmers need EUDR support</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-021</td><td>EUDR operator documentation services</td><td>Y</td><td>Documentation requirements for Peruvian coffee/cacao operators</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-022</td><td>Cacao plot-level geolocation</td><td>Y</td><td>San Martín and Ucayali cacao polygon mapping</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-023</td><td>Cacao agroforestry monitoring</td><td>Y</td><td>Cacao agroforestry carbon monitoring in selva alta</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-026</td><td>Cacao climate adaptation</td><td>Y</td><td>Varietal resilience research for Peruvian fino de aroma cacao</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-029</td><td>Pasture-driven deforestation monitoring</td><td>Y</td><td>Amazon frontier cattle expansion monitoring</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-032</td><td>Cross-commodity EUDR landscape compliance</td><td>Y</td><td>Multi-commodity landscapes in Ucayali and San Martín</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-034</td><td>Palm oil mill traceability</td><td>Y</td><td>San Martín palm oil production</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-035</td><td>RSPO and palm certification</td><td>Y</td><td>RSPO-certified operations in Peruvian Amazon</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-036</td><td>Imported commodity deforestation risk screening</td><td>Y</td><td>Peru as origin country for EU-destined commodities</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-039</td><td>Community forest management</td><td>Y</td><td>Indigenous community forest governance in Amazon basin</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-040</td><td>Smallholder group certification</td><td>Y</td><td>Coffee cooperative group certification models</td></tr> <tr><td>CT-EX-041</td><td>Alternative development crop compliance</td><td>partial</td><td>DEVIDA alternative development regions with coca-to-cacao transitions</td></tr></table>