ABIDJAN,
Ivory Coast, January 28, 2021/ -- Help is on the way for the global
cocoa supply chain,
severely threatened by climate change.
A new project by the African Development Bank (
www.AfDB.org) and the International Agroforestry Agency [
ICRAF (
www.WorldAgroForestry.org)]
would bring relief to two Ivorian smallholder cocoa farmers’
communities in Soubre and Vavoua currently grappling with declining
yields caused by climate change and worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Without
help, some 800,000 Ivorian smallholder farmers, who produce the largest
share of the world’s cocoa supply, could suffer heavy production losses
due to production and supply chain disruption.
“Our experience
has proven that agroforestry practices, knowledge, and skills transfer
enhance the sustainability of cocoa plantations and improve the
resilience of smallholder farmers’ communities, particularly of women
and youth,” said Christophe Kouame, ICRAF’s Director for Central and
West Africa.
Côte d’Ivoire is the world’s largest cocoa producer,
followed by Ghana. Together, the two West African neighbours account
for more than two-thirds of the global supply. Cocoa plantations, which
are the backbone of the world’s chocolate supply, are highly vulnerable
to climate hazards, such as heatwaves, droughts, seasonal shifts, and
erratic rainfall.
Under the Bank’s new initiative, the two
smallholder farmer communities will receive climate-resilient and
sustainable agroforestry assistance in 2021. The scheme will be
implemented by the ICRAF and its partners – Mars Confectionaries, and
the Rainforest Alliance.
“Agroforestry and climate-smart
landscapes can generate nature-based solutions that reduce climate
risks, as well as losses and damages caused by climate change,” Kouame
said.
The Adaptation Benefits
Mechanism (ABM) – a first-of-a-kind results-based non-market mechanism
for financing adaptation, piloted by the African Development Bank in the
period 2019-2023, will be used to mobilize new finance to replicate the
successful practices in other Ivorian cocoa farmer communities and in
at least three other cocoa-growing countries in the region.
“The
current levels of climate finance for Africa are only a fraction of
what is needed to ensure a smooth transition to a sustainable, low
carbon and resilient continent,” said Anthony Nyong, Director for
Climate Change and Green Growth at the African Development
Bank. “The African Development Bank aims to mobilize at least $50
million by 2023 to pilot the ABM and operationalize it for global use.”
Under
the ABM, adaptation project developers can sign off-take agreements
with a variety of public, private and non-profit actors for payments
upon delivery of certified adaptation benefits and use those agreements
as collateral for achieving equity and raising finance. This additional
revenue stream will make adaptation projects that will not be
implemented otherwise feasible.
Unlike mitigation projects, the
vast majority of adaptation initiatives struggle to raise finance
because they deliver public good and rarely generate cash flows. Without
an incentive to address this issue, such as through the ABM, many
vulnerable communities will become even more exposed to the devastating
impacts of climate change.
“The ABM promises to be a game-changer
in better engaging the private sector, non-profit organizations and
local governments to address the huge adaptation deficit,” Nyong said.
More information about the ABM is available
here (
https://bit.ly/3t4phf4).
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