Dimarjan

Dimarjan

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Building local community equity and wealth through sustainable agriculture in Africa. Create community wealth. Redefine sustainability. Drive global impact.

Our Mission
We leverage local community partnerships, traditional best practices, and sustainable innovations to change the narrative in Southwest Africa and drive global impact. We are partners to the communities where we operate. Our projects seek to enable local communities to create wealth through cooperative profit-sharing, job creation, and economic revitalization. Our approach combines trad

06/18/2026

Most climate stories focus on collapse.
The Biggest Little Farm focuses on rebuilding.

It follows two people who take exhausted, degraded land and spend years restoring it into a thriving, biodiverse ecosystem. It is messy, slow, beautiful work — and it shows something essential:

Nature wants to heal, if we give it the chance.

Here are the lessons the film makes unforgettable:

→ Regeneration is not instant, it is iterative
→ Biodiversity is the engine of resilience
→ Healthy soil transforms entire landscapes
→ Ecosystems respond when humans work with nature, not against it
→ Restoration creates stability for communities, not just carbon benefits

The film is not about perfection.
It is about commitment, patience, and the courage to rebuild what was lost.

This is exactly what Dimarjan does in Angola:

✓ Restores degraded land through agroforestry
✓ Rebuilds biodiversity and soil health
✓ Supports forty‑seven full‑time workers with stable income
✓ Removes carbon through verified, nature‑based systems
✓ Tracks every ton with satellite and blockchain verification

The Biggest Little Farm shows the emotional truth of regeneration.
Dimarjan shows the operational reality.

If you want to take responsibility for your footprint and support real restoration, start here:
www.dimarjan.com/badges

06/16/2026

🌿 “I am family. That is why I am here.” — Domingos

For Domingos, working the land is an act of family, contribution, and shared purpose. He is part of the next generation that supports Marcelino’s household and helps sustain what the community is building together in Eyandja.

As he shared with us:

“I am family. That is why I am here, to help, to contribute, to be part of what we are building together. Look at what is growing behind me: banana trees, maize, life. This land is alive because people work it with care. I hold this crystal and I think, someone saw us. Someone believes in what is happening here. That means everything.”

His words capture something essential:
the land grows because people care for it, and people grow when their work is recognized.

For Domingos, the partnership is not abstract. It is a sign that the world sees the effort, the discipline, the daily labor that keeps this land alive. It is a reminder that what they are building together matters far beyond Eyandja.

This is how community strength is passed forward.
This is how recognition becomes motivation.

06/11/2026

This summer, millions of people will attend concerts and festivals.
Very few will ask a simple question:

Is this event offsetting its emissions?

They should.

A single arena show with twenty thousand attendees can generate:

→ More than five hundred tons of CO₂ from fan travel alone
→ Massive energy use for lighting, sound, and staging
→ Temporary structures, catering, and merchandise waste
→ Multi‑day festival emissions from camping, generators, and food vendors

Most artists and venues do nothing about it.

Some are different.

Coldplay’s current world tour publicly reports its footprint and invests in:

verified carbon removal

renewable energy for shows

kinetic dance floors and energy‑generating bikes

sustainable aviation fuel

reduced‑impact staging and materials

They prove that accountability can be part of the performance.
But they are the exception, not the rule.

Here is what you can do:

If your concert or festival is not offsetting its emissions, you can still take responsibility for your own footprint.

When you offset through Dimarjan:

✓ Your emissions fund agroforestry systems in Angola
✓ Degraded land becomes thriving, biodiverse ecosystems
✓ Forty‑seven full‑time workers earn stable income maintaining the systems
✓ Every ton is satellite and blockchain verified
✓ You receive a People and Planet badge proving your offset

We shape the culture we participate in.
If we demand climate‑responsible events, more artists and venues will follow.

Going to a concert this summer. Offset your emissions here: https://www.dimarjan.com/badges

06/09/2026

🌾 “The land rewards the people who stay with it.” — Tio Enriques

Tio Enriques has worked the Eyandja land for many years. He knows every corner of it, every shift in the soil, every sign of a good season and every warning of a hard one. His relationship with the land is built on patience, endurance, and a lifetime of showing up.

As he shared with us:

“I have worked on this land for a long time. I know every corner of it. I have seen good seasons and hard ones. What I know is this: the land rewards the people who stay with it, who don't give up on it. That is what I have done. And now there is a partnership that says, what you have been doing matters. The bananas behind me, the food on this plate, this is proof that the land gives back.”

His words remind us that climate action is not only about innovation, it is about honoring the people who have carried the land through decades of change.
His work is the foundation. The partnership builds on it.

The harvest behind him, the food he holds — these are not symbols. They are proof.
Proof that the land gives back.
Proof that long‑term commitment matters.
Proof that community‑led stewardship is the heart of real climate solutions.

06/08/2026

Today, on World Oceans Day, we are reminded that the climate crisis is not distributed equally.
Rising seas, warming waters, and collapsing marine ecosystems are hitting the world’s most vulnerable communities first despite contributing the least to the pollution driving these changes.

Small island nations, coastal communities, and low‑income countries are already facing:

land loss from sea level rise

saltwater intrusion is destroying crops

fisheries collapsing as marine biodiversity declines

displacement and forced migration

economic instability tied to ocean‑based livelihoods

Meanwhile, the majority of ocean pollution and emissions comes from wealthier nations and industrial systems far from the communities bearing the consequences.

Dumping waste into the ocean is not only killing marine life.
It is destroying food systems, erasing micro‑biodiversity, and destabilizing the ecosystems millions of people rely on for survival.

At Dimarjan, we believe regeneration must include ocean health, community resilience, and climate justice.

Our work in agroforestry, carbon removal, and community‑rooted climate solutions is part of a larger system of care, one where land, water, and people are interconnected.

A regenerative future requires more than restoring ecosystems.
It requires restoring fairness.

06/05/2026

Today, on World Environment Day, we are reminded that protecting the environment is not a single action. It is a system of relationships, responsibilities, and choices that shape the world future generations will inherit.

At Dimarjan, we see this every day in the landscapes and communities we work with.
Regeneration is not only about restoring ecosystems.

It is about strengthening the people who care for them, building economic models that honour the land, and creating systems where communities can thrive without compromising their future.

This year’s theme calls us to accelerate solutions that restore balance.
For us, that means:

supporting agroforestry systems that rebuild soil and livelihoods

investing in high integrity carbon removal rooted in community benefit

designing climate solutions that centre equity, dignity, and long-term resilience

A healthy environment is not a luxury.
It is the foundation of every thriving community.

We remain committed to building regenerative systems that honour people and planet, today and every day.

06/04/2026

This summer, Americans will take an estimated 2.9 billion trips.
Most involve flights, long drives, hotels, or cruises. All of it creates emissions:

→ A round‑trip flight from NYC to LA: ~1.5 tons CO₂ per passenger
→ A 1,000‑mile road trip: ~400 kg CO₂
→ A week‑long cruise: ~1 ton CO₂ per person
→ Hotel stays, dining, tourism waste: it compounds

You can enjoy your vacation and take responsibility for its impact.

When you offset through Dimarjan:

✓ Your emissions fund verified agroforestry systems in Angola
✓ Degraded land becomes productive, biodiverse ecosystems
✓ Forty‑seven full‑time workers maintain the systems and earn stable income
✓ Satellite and blockchain verification ensures accountability
✓ You receive a People and Planet badge that proves your offset

Travel does not have to cost the planet.
If you are planning a trip this summer, consider making climate care part of the journey.

Calculate your trip’s footprint and offset it: https://www.dimarjan.com/badges

Where are you traveling this summer?

06/02/2026

🌱 “I am young. And I love farming.” — Taleia

Taleia is part of a new generation in Eyandja, one that chooses to stay, to plant, to learn, and to build a future rooted in the land. Her love for farming is genuine, surprising to some, but completely natural to her.

As she shared with us:

“I am young. And I love farming, I actually love it. That surprises some people. They expect young people to want to leave. But there is something about planting something with your own hands and watching it grow that nothing else can replace. With Dimarjan, I see that what I do here can also help the climate. That makes me want to do it even better.”

Her words capture a powerful truth:
when young people see a future in the land, the land has a future.

Through this partnership, she sees that her work is not only feeding her community, it is contributing to climate solutions that matter far beyond Eyandja. That connection gives her motivation, pride, and a sense of purpose that grows alongside every seed she plants.

Taleia represents hope with roots.
A future that stays, grows, and leads.

05/29/2026

🌱 If You Watch One Climate Documentary This Year, Make It Kiss the Ground
Most climate films focus on the crisis.
Kiss the Ground focuses on solutions.

It shows something most people never think about:
The soil beneath our feet is one of the most powerful climate tools we have.

Here are the facts the documentary makes impossible to ignore:

→ Healthy soil stores three times more carbon than the atmosphere
→ Regenerative agriculture can restore degraded land in a few seasons
→ Agroforestry systems increase biodiversity, water retention, and food security
→ Soil restoration is one of the fastest, most scalable climate solutions
→ Communities benefit first: food, income, stability, resilience

This is the part that matters most:
Regeneration is not theoretical. It is happening right now.

It is happening in Angola, where Dimarjan builds agroforestry systems that:

✓ Turn degraded land into thriving, biodiverse ecosystems
✓ Support forty‑seven full‑time workers with stable income
✓ Remove carbon through verified, nature‑based systems
✓ Use satellite and blockchain verification to prove every ton
✓ Strengthen communities long before carbon credits are issued

Kiss the Ground shows the global potential.
Dimarjan shows what it looks like in practice.

If you want to take responsibility for your footprint and support real regeneration, start here:
www.dimarjan.com/badges

05/28/2026

Most people think sustainability is about reusable bags, bamboo forks, or recycling.
Those things help, but they are not the full picture.

Here are the facts:

→ The average person generates 4.7 tons of CO₂ per year from daily life
→ Sixty percent of global emissions come from household consumption
→ Food waste produces more greenhouse gases than the entire aviation sector
→ Only nine percent of plastic ever produced has been recycled
→ Up to forty percent of your footprint comes from buying new products

Sustainable living is not about doing everything perfectly.
It is about doing what you can, consistently.

What actually moves the needle:

• buy better, buy less
• repair instead of replace
• waste less food
• recycle intentionally
• rethink how you travel
• offset the emissions you cannot eliminate

Offsetting is not a shortcut, it is part of a responsible lifestyle, especially for the emissions built into modern life that individuals cannot avoid.

When you offset through Dimarjan:

✓ Your footprint funds verified agroforestry systems in Angola
✓ Degraded land becomes thriving, biodiverse ecosystems
✓ Forty‑seven full‑time workers earn stable income maintaining the systems
✓ Every ton is satellite and blockchain verified
✓ You receive a People and Planet badge proving your impact

Protecting the planet is not abstract.
It is a series of choices we make every day.

Start here: www.dimarjan.com/badges

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