FAO supporting Bolivia’s bid to access climate funding via UN fund
President Evo Morales and Director
General José Graziano da Silva agree to joint proposal to Green
Climate Fund
16 February 2017, Rome - FAO is
assisting Bolivia in its effort to access financial support for
improved water management programs in those areas of the Andean
nation that have been hardest hit by prolonged drought.
At a meeting here today, FAO
Director-General Jose Graziano da Silva and Bolivian President Evo
Morales agreed to jointly submit a technical proposal to the UN’s
Green Climate Fund requesting $250 million in support for efforts to
reduce the impacts of climate change on food security and rural
livelihoods in Bolivia.
“This effort represents a clear
example of how countries can access the Green Fund and will serve as
a model for other nations in similar situations looking to access
resources,” said FAO’s Director-General.
Strengthening water security is
fundamental to boosting the resilience of small farmers, he said,
adding that it would be important to establish institutional
mechanisms for overseeing and evaluating how the funding is used.
“People are extremely worried as a
result of the drought and lack of rain, so working with FAO we’re
examining how the Green Fund can help us address this problem.
Guaranteeing water for drinking and irrigation for our indigenous
family farmers is equivalent to liberating our communities from
poverty,” said President Morales.
Drought a recurring phenomenon
Drought and water scarcity have become
recurring problems in Bolivia over the past decade, but the situation
has been particularly alarming since 2015.
Due to its geography and terrain, the
impacts of climate change in Bolivia are manifesting in the form of
hotter and more frequent dry periods, rainy seasons that are shorter
but more intense, and an increase in the occurrence of hailstorms and
freezes. Degradation of natural resources exacerbates the impacts
these climate-related changes are having.
According to FAO, to cope with the
impacts of climate changes on agriculture and food security countries
must make organizational and technological changes to water
management that correspond to the needs of small farmers. Restoring
local water cycles is particularly important area for action that is
essential to ensuring that communities have access to adequate water
resources.
The Green Climate fund is an
international funding mechanism established at the 2010 UN Climate
Conference that aims to support developing country efforts to adapt
to and mitigate the impacts of climate change.
Countries can receive stand-alone
grants for simpler projects like well or cistern construction, or
loans for more complex projects like the large-scale irrigation
systems, either directly from the fund or via accredited implementing
agencies, such as FAO.
In the case of the Bolivia proposal,
the funding would be challenged directly to that country’s national
“Mi Riego” (My Irrigation) program.
The proposal is being developed by a
working group comprised of FAO experts and officials from Bolivia’s
Ministers for Development Planning and Environment and Water. The
group was convened following President Morales request for FAO
assistance made at the recently held summit of the Community of Latin
American and Caribbean States.
One of FAO’s key roles is to assist
countries in their efforts to respond to climate change by providing
technical assistance, information and data, and other tools to
strengthen their adaptive capacities.
For many countries, acquiring the
capacity to access and use international financing mechanism
represents a critical first step towards greater resilience to
climate change.
Camels and quinoa
Graziano da Silva and Morales also
discussed Bolivia’s proposal to the UN calling for an
“International Year of the Camelid.”
Following the success of the
International Year of Quinoa in 2013 – also a Bolivian proposals –
the country is hoping to spotlight the contribution these hardy
animals can make to supporting farming and food security in other
world regions.
The two men also discussed conducting a
joint study to review the impacts of the International Year of Quinoa
and facilitate more widespread production and consumption of the
highly nutritious, grain-like crop sometimes called “Andean
superfood.”
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