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The World Bank Transformative and Integrated Solutions for Landscapes Management The Sahel and West Africa Program (SAWAP) in support of the Great Green.

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Presentation on theme: "The World Bank Transformative and Integrated Solutions for Landscapes Management The Sahel and West Africa Program (SAWAP) in support of the Great Green."— Presentation transcript:

1 The World Bank Transformative and Integrated Solutions for Landscapes Management The Sahel and West Africa Program (SAWAP) in support of the Great Green Wall Initiative Gayatri Kanungo, Senior Environmental Specialist

2  The Great Green Wall Initiative (GGWI) is an African initiative to transform the Sahel into a stable, sustainable, resilient region through improved management of natural resources, land, water, and climate risks.  The GGWI promotes an integrated landscape approach in participating Sub-Saharan and North African countries. The Great Green Wall Initiative  The GGWI is rallying a larger number of partners, under the coordination of the African Union Commission (AUC): EC, GEF, FAO, GM-UNCCD, WB, CILSS, OSS, IUCN, PAA, etc. African countries participating in the Great Green Wall

3  The WB-UN Sahel Initiative renews focus on boosting the region’s economic growth, shared prosperity and reducing poverty by transforming livelihoods and landscapes in the Sahel. SAWAP is a strategic part. World Bank - United Nations Sahel Initiative World Bank President Jim Yong Kim with African Union Commission Chairperson Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, and President of Niger Issoufou Mahamadou in Niamey, Niger, during their Sahel trip in 2013.

4 The World Bank Why environment and natural resources matter in these countries  Sahel and West Africa countries are amongst Africa’s drylands – with highest climate related risks and vulnerabilities  Drylands (including marginal areas and borderlands) are hotspots of natural disasters  Noted depletion of soil fertility, forest degradation and water stress  Noted indirect impacts of climate variability (rainfall and temperature) – increased spread of human and livestock diseases, natural resource exploitation  Resulting in challenges managing the environment and renewable natural resources – land, water, forests, livestock, fish and ecosystems.  All of the above linked to food insecurity.

5 Support to the GGW  Against this background, the World Bank and GEF partnered to deepen engagement in support of the GGWI, through the Sahel and West Africa Program (SAWAP), under the TerrAfrica Partnership.

6 The World Bank BENINBURKINA FASOCHADETHIOPIAGHANAMALIMAURITANIANIGERNIGERIA SENEGAL SUDANTOGO BRICKS REGIONAL Sahel and West Africa Program (SAWAP, $1.1 billion)

7 The World Bank SAWAP - Key Features Implementing landscape approach Multiple sectors and themes: agriculture, water, forest, climate and disaster risk, green growth, resilience $1.1B total new financing $900M WB IDA and trust funds $108M GEF and its adaptation funds Government budgets 12 country +1 Regional project, approved and under implementation

8 The World Bank SAWAP - OBJECTIVE Increase in land area with SLWM practices Changes in vegetation cover Institutions with increased adaptive capacity Change in carbon accumulation rates in biomass and soil PDO: TO EXPAND SUSTAINABLE LAND AND WATER MANAGEMENT IN TARGETED LANDSCAPES IN CLIMATE VULNERABLE AREAS IN WEST AFRICAN AND SAHELIAN COUNTRIES PROGRAM LEVEL PERFORMANCE INDICATORS

9 The World Bank SAWAP - APPROACH – Integrated Landscape Management (ILM) 9 ProductionConservation Landscape Approach is about connecting protected areas, forests, woodlands, agro-silvo- pastoral lands, croplands, irrigated agricultural lands for …… For the multiple wins of: Increased productivity Increased résilience Increased GHG mitigation Improved biodiversity Increased water production Increased peace and security

10 The World Bank ILM MENU OF OPTIONS – Sustainable land, water and forest management

11 The World Bank ETHIOPIA PDO - To reduce land degradation and improve land productivity in selected watersheds in targeted regions in Ethiopia Sustainable Land Management Project Phase II (SLMP-II) US$ 107.61 M total GEF: US$ 12.96 M IDA: US$ 50 M Govt: US$ 2 M Norway: US$ 42.65 M Status: Under Implementation since April 2014

12 The World Bank GHANA Sustainable Land and Water Management Project US$ 13.25 M total GEF: US$ 8.75 M Govt: US$ 4.5 M PDO - To expand the area under sustainable land and water management practices in selected watersheds Status: Under Implementation since April 2014

13 The World Bank TOGO PDO - To strengthen institutional capacity of targeted institutions to manage the risk of flooding and land degradation in targeted rural and urban areas GEO - To expand sustainable land management (SLM) in targeted landscapes and in climate vulnerable areas in Togo Integrated Disaster and Land Management Project US$ 16.95M total GEF: US$ 9.16 M GFDRR and TerrAfrica trust funds: US$ 7.79 M Status: Under implementation since Sept 2012

14 The World Bank Implemented by: CILSS: Interstate Committee for Drought Control in the Sahel OSS: Sahara and Sahel Observatory IUCN: International Union for the Conservation of Nature REGIONAL - BRICKS Building Resilience through Innovation, Communication and Knowledge Services Status: Under Implementation PDO - To improve accessibility of best practices and monitoring information within the SAWAP portfolio on integrated management of land and land use change US$ 4.6 M total GEF: US$ 4.6 M

15 The World Bank Benefits and Transformative Impacts  Ecosystem level - Connectivity of land, water, forests and ecosystems  Local level - Connects local stakeholders (on farm and off farm level); brings communities together (upstream farmers with downstream water users) for collective action and reducing climate vulnerabilities; acknowledges their roles.  National level - Connects multiple sectors for adaptive management: competing land uses, and relevant sectoral institutions.  Regional level - Connectivity across the region, spatial impact through connecting geographic boundaries and comprehensive regional stakeholder engagement  Financial Implications: allows combining of funds from various sources into a comprehensive package.

16 The World Bank TerrAfrica Relevance  Sustainable NRM for resilient landscapes as a key solution is gaining strong visibility.  TerrAfrica has been a pioneer, game changer and partner of choice for this agenda.  Several Landscapes Programs in Africa’s drylands (Figure 1) are being supported under TerrAfrica with emerging lessons for replication  Responding to growing and new challenges: Integrating resilience, security, migration within the development agenda Figure 1 : TerrAfrica scope of activities : Available Knowledge Resources TerrAfricaTerrAfrica: an Africa-based and Africa-led partnership of 26 Sub-Saharan countries and 20 partners

17 The World Bank Thank You. SAWAP: http://terrafrica.org/great-green-wall/http://terrafrica.org/great-green-wall/ GGWI: http://www.greatgreenwallinitiative.org/ TerrAfrica: http://terrafrica.org/http://terrafrica.org/


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