IFAD and GCF scale-up action to improve life for millions of people and restore ecosystems in Africa’s Great Green Wall
Paris, 11 January 2021 –
Millions of poor farmers living in the world’s most climate-impacted
parts of the Sahel have cause for hope today because of their
governments’... support for accelerating Africa’s Great Green Wall (GGW),
an area covering 11 countries from Senegal and Mali in the West to
Ethiopia and Djibouti in the East. A new investment programme is
planned to support Sahelian governments through a partnership between
the Green Climate Fund (GCF) and the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD) in order to boost climate finance for these rural
populations.
At
the request of Sahelian Ministers in September 2020, IFAD and other GCF
accredited entities will submit projects for funding consideration by
the GCF’s Board, under this new Great Green Wall Umbrella Programme (GGW
Up). IFAD will lead the set up of the programme and ensure its
coordination with other partners. Project activities will aim to restore
ecosystems and tackle the interlinked issues of climate change, job
creation, poverty alleviation, food security and peacebuilding.
Yannick
Glemarec, the Executive Director of the Green Climate Fund, pointed out
that “GCF is committed to scaling up the efforts of Sahelian countries
to establish and develop the Great Green Wall, combating the effects of
drought, deforestation and climate change. With an expanded focus on
strengthening sustainable agricultural value chains across the region
and increased private sector investment in decentralized renewable
energies, this innovative programme will boost climate adaptation and
resilience of millions of people, as well as supporting local ecosystems
and biodiversity.”
“IFAD
is determined to help rural populations in the Sahel build dignified
lives. Stronger resilience to climate change, more biodiversity, greener
pastoral and arable land means better food security, higher incomes,
less migration and more stability,” said Gilbert F. Houngbo, President
of IFAD, the UN agency dedicated to eradicating rural poverty and
hunger. “We are glad to bring our 40 years of expertise to work with
partners to make the Great Green Wall a success.”
Although
IFAD is a new partner to the GGW initiative, it brings 40 years of
experience working with vulnerable rural populations in the Sahel and a
proven track record of greening Sahelian areas, with ongoing investments
amounting to $480 million in the GGW area. To scale up these efforts, IFAD and other GCF
accredited entities will also submit projects and programmes to the GCF
Board, which together will aim to leverage up to a total of $1 billion
in multi-partner resources for the GGW in 2021 and 2022.
Climate
change is a driver of hunger. In the Sahel, rural people who depend on
rain-fed agriculture and pastoralism are already experiencing higher
temperatures, shorter wet seasons and more frequent storms which damage
crops and lands. Last year, in Sub-Saharan Africa, about 22 percent of
the population suffered from hunger, with a increase of 60 million more
hungry people since 2010. With the population set to double by 2050,
millions of rural youth in the Sahel face an uncertain future due to
falling agricultural yields, and a severe lack of investments and jobs
in rural areas, fueling migration and conflicts over a shrivelling
natural resource base.
The
GGW Up will support land restoration and the sustainable management of
natural resources, scaling up existing investments in the GGW by other
partners over the last 12 years. Small-scale farmers and agribusinesses
will have better access to markets and strengthened value chains,
creating economic opportunities and jobs, through the development of
climate-resilient infrastructure and expanding the use of solar energy.
The umbrella programme will
enhance synergies between projects, increase their impact, and ensure
harmonised monitoring and evaluation. It will support the Sahelian
countries in the achievement of their Sustainable Development Goals over
the next decade.
IFAD
and GCF will also work closely with all Great Green Wall countries and
institutions, and in particular the United Nations Convention to Combat
Desertification (UNCCD), a key partner in the GGW initiative, and the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
“The
GGW Up of the GCF and IFAD is a significant boost for rural
communities. Not just because it targets small holder farmers fighting
to save their lands, but because, from the UNCCD perspective, it’s the
kind of ambitious economic stimulus that, at once, can help to rebuild
livelihoods devastated by COVID-19 and build the food security of
households threatened by the worst effects of climate change,” says
Ibrahim Thiaw, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Convention to
Combat Desertification.
The GGW Up initiative contributes directly to the Great Green Wall Accelerator, a wider initiative led by France to realise the GGW targets by 2030.
Note to the editors:
Endorsed by the African Union in 2007, the GGW is one of the earliest
international land restoration initiatives that brings together African
countries and international partners, under the leadership of the AU and
the Pan-African Agency of the Great Green Wall (PAA). A broad set of
African and international partners are involved in the initiative
through project implementation and development, or through the funding
of several ongoing and future projects in all GGW countries. The GGW
goes through Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria,
Chad, Sudan, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti. |
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