联合国粮农 18小时前
Ugbaad symbolizes hope: Somalia looks to boost climate resilient agriculture with new project
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Ugbaad项目,索马里语意为“fresh sprouting pasture”,象征着希望,旨在提升气候适应型农业。该项目由索马里政府和联合国粮农组织(FAO)主导,获得绿色气候基金(GCF)7970万美元投资。项目为期七年,将通过恢复景观、减少气候变化影响等措施,增强社区和农业系统的韧性。项目预计惠及200多万人,重点关注受气候变化和冲突影响的脆弱群体,通过支持社区参与、加强政府服务和基础设施建设,促进索马里农业的可持续发展。

🌱 Ugbaad项目旨在应对索马里面临的气候挑战,特别是干旱和洪涝灾害。干旱导致牧民牲畜损失,影响收入和粮食安全;洪涝则破坏财产和生计。项目将通过恢复景观、改善水资源获取和提供气候信息服务来解决这些问题。

🤝 项目将促进社区参与,加强政府治理和服务能力。这包括支持社区参与景观恢复,加强政府提供气候和气象信息的能力,以及支持联邦和州级部门应对危机。项目还将与当地社区、政府和其他利益相关者建立伙伴关系。

📈 项目预计将带来显著的积极影响。它将恢复超过40,000公顷的生产性景观,修复15公里灌溉渠和70公里乡村道路。此外,还将使15,000人的收入提高至少15%,改善90万人的用水条件,并为95万人提供气候信息服务。

Rome/Mogadishu –

Ugbaad – the Somali name for a new project that aims to boost climate resilient agriculture – translates as “fresh sprouting pasture”, symbolizing hope. The Climate Resilient Agriculture project bearing its name will tackle persistent challenges in Somalia, a country where nearly two-thirds of the population depend on the agricultural sector and in which climatic shocks and conflict have pushed nearly a quarter of the population into acute food insecurity – a number expected to rise in coming months.  

The seven-year project is pioneering in its scale and scope. Steered by the Federal Government and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), with a $79.7 million investment from the

Green Climate Fund

(GCF), it will contribute to communities and agricultural systems through building resilience to climate change and enacting initiatives that restore landscapes, reducing the impact of climate change.

“In this era of escalating climate risk, the Ugbaad project will support resilient livelihoods through sustainable agricultural practices, more productive landscapes, and greater access to water,” said Henry Gonzalez, the Green Climate Fund’s Chief Investment Officer. “Our priority, in partnership with our implementing partners, is to ensure that vulnerable communities have access to climate finance.”

Approved in late 2024, this is the first single-country investment in Somalia for the GCF, which has more than 286 projects in more than 133 developing countries. The investment builds on the country’s engagement in a two-year Green Climate Fund Readiness Programme, enhancing its capacity to access and manage climate finance, develop GCF Country Programme and develop investment concept notes.

Community participation

The growing number and increasing intensity of droughts in Somalia present a particular threat to pastoralists, who make up a majority of Somalia’s population. Droughts typically lead to households losing 40 percent of their livestock because they can’t access fodder. This, in turn, leads to reductions in household income, surges in displaced peoples, food and nutrition insecurity, and health, education, and security problems.

The project will support community participation in the restoration of productive landscapes while strengthening governance and the government’s ability to provide services including climate and meteorological information. Progress in these areas will help transform unsustainable, unproductive, and maladapted agricultural production systems to more resilient and productive agricultural practices.


The project also aims to prevent and repair damage from serious flooding events, which have become almost yearly occurrences over the recent past especially along the Jubba and Shabelle rivers, destroying property and livelihoods.

Vulnerable households and villages will receive support to access water and other resources, as well as benefit from expanded meteorological alerts. The capacity of federal and state level ministries to deal with these crises will also be strengthened, with such support eventually expanded to reach national research centers and universities, farmers’ associations and civil-society organizations.

Expected impact in numbers

The project will benefit over two million people, over half of which are direct beneficiaries.

Restore over 40,000 hectares of productive landscapes through locally led approach.

Rehabilitate 15 km of secondary and tertiary irrigation canals and 70 km of rural roads to make infrastructure more resilient to the effects of climate change,

 Increase income of 15 000 people by at least 15 percent with the development of climate-resilient value chains.

Improve access to water for 900 000 people; and access to climate information services for 950 000 people.



Local actors are protagonists

‘’The Ugbaad project will be implemented through a series of partnerships and collaborations with local communities, the government and other stakeholders,” said FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for Africa Abebe Haile-Gabriel. “This approach recognizes both the challenges communities face and the opportunities to advance locally led adaptation efforts.”

By combining technical expertise with local solutions, FAO will work with the Government to reach farmers, agropastoralists, and pastoralists in Somalia to bolster their resilience and ability to thrive in the face of climate challenges."

Ugbaad is aligned with Somalia’s National Transformation Plan and was welcomed by H.E. Deputy Prime Minister Salah Jama.

“Somalia is taking bold steps to ensure climate resilience is at the heart of our national development agenda,” the Prime Minister said at the launch of the project. “Through the Ugbaad project, we are integrating climate action into our National Transformation Plan, creating opportunities to restore landscapes, secure resilient livelihoods, and build a sustainable future for all," he said.

Operating in fragile and conflict-affected states is critical for reaching those most impacted by climate change, but it also comes with challenges. Ugbaad, like other projects, involves close cooperation with local actors within robust oversight frameworks. FAO, through strong fiduciary and safeguards frameworks and control mechanisms, ensures that resources allocated, are used efficiently and effectively and not diverted from their intended purpose.

Ugbaad, formally launched in February, is undertaking consultations with government partners with an inception workshop planned for April. Project activities will start in accordance with a work plan to be finalised at the workshop.   

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气候变化 农业 索马里 Ugbaad项目
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