Chapare Province

Chapare Province
Villa Tunari on Chapare River
Location of Chapare Province within Bolivia
General Data
Country Bolivia Bolivia
Department Cochabamba Department
Capital Sacaba
Municipalities 3
Cantons 13
Area 12,445 km2
Elevation m
Population 333,408(2024)
Density 21.5 inhabitants/km2 (2024)
Sub-prefect
Languages Quechua, Spanish, Aymara, Yuracaré
ISO 3166-2 BO.CB.CH
Cochabamba Department

Chapare (Spanish: [tʃaˈpaɾe], also called The Chapare, is a rural province in the northern region of Cochabamba Department in central Bolivia. Most of the territory consists of valley rainforests that surround the area's main waterway, the Chapare River, which is also a tributary of the Amazon River. The provincial capital is Sacaba, 11 km east of Cochabamba. Its principal town is Villa Tunari, a popular tourist destination.

In recent decades, the Chapare province has become a haven for illegal cultivation of the coca plant, which can be used to produce cocaine. This is due to Bolivian drug law, which until recently only permitted the Yungas region to legally grow coca, despite Chapare being a historical area for growth due to its fertility. For this reason, Chapare has been a primary target for coca eradication in recent years, with frequent and heated clashes between the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Bolivian cocaleros. The law has since been changed by a deal that was struck between Evo Morales (a former coca activist and the country's first indigenous President (2006-2019)) and former President Carlos Mesa. This deal permits the region to grow a limited amount of coca every year .