TCU Ranch Management alumnus receives international conservation award
Photo by Joao Canziani |
Fort Worth, Texas
4/18/2011
On April 21, 2011, TCU Ranch Management alumnus John Cain Carter will receive the Botanical Research Institute of Texas’ 2011 International Award of Excellence in Conservation.
As
founder of Aliança da Terra, a non-profit NGO, Carter works to persuade Brazilian
landowners to use sustainable land management practices to improve the
environment and save the Amazon rainforest. The organization provides economic
incentives to encourage farmers who meet the social-environmental criteria set
forth by the Registry for Social-Environmental Responsibility.
“Mr.
Carter sets an impressive example of what can be done to slow deforestation of
one of the world's most invaluable ecosystems, the Amazon rainforest,"
said S. H. Sohmer, Ph.D., FLS, BRIT’s president and director.
Carter’s
work began shortly after he moved to Brazil to manage his father-in-law’s cattle
ranching operations in 1996, when he became aware of deforestation due to
burning techniques used to clear land to accommodate for more lucrative cattle
grazing or farming.
Carter
founded Aliança da Terra in 2004 and continues to pursue ways in which he can
further Amazonian conservation efforts. He maintains a relationship with TCU’s
Ranch Management program and works to involve its faculty and students in solving
the problem in Brazil.
“Sustainability
is core to what we teach every day,” said Kerry Cornelius, director of TCU’s
Ranch Management program. “Mr. Carter epitomizes the leadership and values of
our program—we are incredibly proud of the momentum he has built. He has truly
earned this award and we are all rooting for him as he continues to make
meaningful changes through Aliança da Terra.”
According
to Jeff Geider, director of TCU’s Institute of Ranch Management, Carter and his
wife Kika (also a Ranch Management graduate) continue to remain loyal
supporters of the program.
“John
and Kika have been instrumental in helping the institute build a relationship
with Brazilian and U.S. stakeholders involving educational, cultural and global
outreach exchanges,” he said. “They have demonstrated by example and have
created many opportunities for TCU Ranch management students to view, in real
time, the successes that arise from applying this methodology.”
Geider
explained that Ranch Management studies are of the “applied science” variety
and that this “practical application and experiential learning is the ethos of
the program.”
“In
short, there are some who talk about what should be done to be responsible
stewards of the world’s resources and there are others who do it,” Geider
continued. “The Carters have done it with pride, passion and unparalleled
enthusiasm.”