The Provincial Municipality of Satipo, Peru has approved Ordinance N° 33, declaring the rights of stingless bees.
The bees within the territory of the Avireri-Vraem biosphere reserve that spans nearly 16,000 square miles (.. larger than the state of Maryland) from the Amazon rainforest to the Andes mountains, is one of the most biologically and culturally diverse landscapes on Earth.
As an environmental attorney, I view this ordinance not as a symbolic flourish, but as a jurisprudential innovation responsive to the global existential crisis of biodiversity degradation.
From “Economic Importance” to Inherent Rights
Peru took an important step in 2024 when it enacted national legislation recognizing native bees as species of economic importance and affording them protections. Until then, the law shielded only the European honeybee (Apis mellifera), a non-native species. Ordinance N° 33 builds on that foundation but goes further, recognizing stingless bees not merely as economic assets, but as rights-bearing subjects.
Stingless bees are the most ancient lineage of bees. Roughly half of the world’s 500 known species inhabit the Amazon basin, and Peru is home to at least 175 species. They pollinate more than 80% of Amazonian flora, including cacao, coffee, and avocados; crops that underpin both subsistence and export economies.
The ordinance declares that stingless bees are entitled to:
- Exist and maintain thriving populations
- Inhabit pollution-free environments
- Access ecologically stable climate conditions
- Be represented in legal proceedings if threatened or harmed
That final element, legal representation, moves beyond regulatory compliance toward enforceable ecological guardianship. In effect, the bees now have legal standing.
Biodiversity Loss Is Not Abstract
The urgency is undeniable. According to the World Wildlife Fund’s Living Planet Index, global populations of mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles, and fish have declined by an average of 68% in less than five decades. The International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List identifies over 1,100 insect species as threatened, including more than 20 bee species.
Pollinator collapse is not a niche issue; it is a systemic risk to food security, forest regeneration, and climate resilience.
In the Peruvian Amazon, the decline of stingless bees jeopardizes not only ecosystem function but cultural survival. The Asháninka and Kukama-Kukamiria peoples have practiced meliponiculture, the traditional cultivation of stingless bees, for generations. Four key species are stewarded to ensure forest reproduction and community livelihoods. The ordinance explicitly protects both the pollinators and the ancestral knowledge intertwined with them.
Indigenous Leadership and Earth Jurisprudence
This initiative protects an estimated 22 million bees across 300,000 square meters of rainforest.
This is not performative environmentalism. The ordinance compels local authorities to:
- Restore bee habitat
- Regulate pesticide use
- Support scientific research
- Apply the precautionary principle
The precautionary principle is particularly significant in legal terms: actions potentially harmful to bees must be avoided unless proven safe. That shifts the evidentiary burden in a manner consistent with modern environmental risk management.
Importantly, this is the first time any government has recognized the rights of an insect, and the first formal recognition of bee rights anywhere in the world.
A Regional and Global Context
Peru is not acting in isolation. In 2022, Panama enacted a national Rights of Nature law recognizing the rights of ecosystems and species. In March 2023, it strengthened that framework with species specific legislation recognizing sea turtles and their habitats as subjects of rights, among the first such targeted protections globally. Panama’s model has drawn international attention as a template for biodiversity governance.
In the United States, we once blogged approvingly about Two Creeks, a Marsh and Two Lakes Sue a Florida Real Estate Developer, an early experiment in granting standing to natural features. But Peru’s ordinance is qualitatively different. It is not an isolated lawsuit; it is a democratically enacted legal framework embedded in local governance and Indigenous stewardship.
A petition urging Peru’s federal government to codify bee rights nationally has already garnered more than 386,000 signatures. Advocates in the Netherlands, Bolivia, and the United States are exploring replication.
Beyond 1970s Environmental Statutes
Most U.S. environmental statutes, such as NEPA, the Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act, were enacted in the 1970s. They remain foundational but are anthropocentric and regulatory in structure. They manage harm; they do not recognize intrinsic rights.
Biodiversity degradation demands more than incremental permitting reforms. When over two thirds of vertebrate populations have disappeared in under fifty years, and pollinators critical to 80% of flowering plants are in decline, incrementalism is malpractice.
Recognizing rights of nature, and here, the rights of bees, reframes the legal paradigm. It affirms that non human life forms possess inherent interests that the law must respect, not merely manage.
As an attorney, I understand the doctrinal challenges: standing, guardianship models, separation of powers, enforcement capacity. But the conceptual shift is indispensable. Law evolves in response to moral insight and ecological necessity.
Peru’s ordinance in Satipo is not sentimental advocacy for insects. It is a measured, culturally grounded, science informed response to a biodiversity emergency. By granting stingless bees the right “to be,” Peru has offered a legal instrument proportionate to the crisis.
And make no mistake: enabling nature to seek judicial redress is not a radical fringe theory. It is a public policy trajectory that may soon find its way into courtrooms in the United States.
The right to bee may be the right idea at precisely the right time.