Rotary Club Kyadondo Presentation 9042024
Rotary Club Kyadondo Presentation 9042024
Rotary Club Kyadondo Presentation 9042024
Source: floodresilience.net
But, today the world is warmer than it has been many years ago
– growth of cities, more and more cars and factories,
deforestation all pump carbon dioxide into the air… steady use
of fossil fuels, unsustainable consumption and production
pathways.
Global response:
• Developed countries committed in the Copenhagen Accord, 2009, to jointly mobilize 100
billion USD a year in climate finance by 2020, to address the needs of developing countries
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) ’s sixth Assessment Report
(AR6) conclusions (Carbon Brief, 2023):
⁻ “Overwhelming majority” of global climate finance has so far been targeted at climate
change mitigation
- ‘Climate change “will increasingly put pressure on food production and access,
especially in vulnerable regions, undermining food security and nutrition”
Key statistics and information: Uganda
• Uganda has over six and half million agricultural households (UBOS, 2019), out of which
more than three and a half million are family farms, many of who are among the poorest
people in the world (FAO, 2023)
• Uganda at 0.581 is the 15th most vulnerable country (Notre Dame Global Adaptation
Initiative (ND-GAIN) matrix).
• W/o implementation of adaptation actions, studies have estimated that, the cost of
impacts of climate variability and change in Uganda would range between USD 270 and
USD 332 billion over the 40-year period 2010- 2050, for the sectors of agriculture, water,
infrastructure and energy
• What: Document and amplify Ugandan voices in national, regional and international
climate change and environmental dialogues and processes to ensure equity;
responses are based on this evidence / realities faced by vulnerable communities.
• Membership: 70 (40 women and 30 men including youths), initiated a number of local climate
adaptation and coping actions
• Driver: a need to address alarming low levels of food security, low income in the rural
communities + need to protect the area against further rapid degradation of natural high
forests on the characteristic hilly landscapes meet the demand for fuel wood and charcoal
• In a span of 20 years, KEA has planted > 300,000 indigenous trees in Kasejjere village and
neighbouring localities
• Comparing their community with the neighbouring communities: there are less incidences of
storms and water run-off in Kasejjere due to the relatively higher vegetation cover. Indeed, the
Sub county Chairman Mr. Jackson Kamya Ssempala summed it up that, ‘In Kikandwa we get
rains others get storms’.
• KEA has largely depended on its own generated resources from its members
(membership contribution, donations and in-kind support).
• Support is also from volunteers that have come to support KEA, in terms of training
staff, and developing project proposals for funding (TerraMatch Fund / AFR100 project
running now to plant 100,000 trees in the period 2021-26).
• KEA has also received short term grant support
Next steps
• Restoration of forest cover through the ‘half + half 1,000 acre’ community forest project
concept of planting trees on private land
• Bee keeping
• Livestock production incl. free-ranging chicken, turkeys, goats, sheep, pigs and cattle.
• Growing and conserving drought resistant, water tolerant indigenous food crops like yams
o Climate Focus et. Al (2023). Untapped Potential. An analysis of international public climate finance flows to sustainable agriculture and family farmers:
https://www.ruralforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/ENG_Untapped-Potential_Embargoed-14-Nov.pdf
o FAO (2023). Family Farming Knowledge Platform - The smallholder farmers of Uganda: https://www.fao.org/family-farming/detail/en/c/1629961/ accessed November 14, 2023
o MoFPED et. al (2023). Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development Policy Brief: The Potential of Innovative Instruments to Finance Climate Action in Uganda.
Supported by IKI, GIZ and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action:
https://media.licdn.com/dms/document/media/D4D1FAQHSmOsBp3mPog/feedshare-document-pdf-
analyzed/0/1695822281385?e=1698883200&v=beta&t=FcAmS4iQlj_dclKdzc3Q9nCwCW89YzA6heR2IpEDcQY
o Ministry of Water and Environment (July 2022). Uganda’s Third National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change:
https://unfccc.int/sites/default/files/resource/Final%20TNC%20Uganda.pdf
o The Impact of Climate Change on Coffee in Uganda: Lessons from a case study in the Rwenzori Mountains. OXFAM Research Reports https://policy-
practice.oxfam.org/resources/the-impact-of-climate-change-on-coffee-in-uganda-lessons-from-a-case-study-in-t-277813/
o Partners for Resilience, CARE and EMLI (2020). Climate finance adaptation study report Uganda: https://careclimatechange.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Uganda-Climate-
Adaptation-Finance-Tracking.pdf
o UCSD (2019). The East African Sustainability Watch E bulletin February 2019. Mityana Farmers Decry the Rampant Tree Cutting, Unguided Use of Agrochemicals
https://www.scribd.com/document/401116123/Final-EA-SusWatch-Ebulletin-February-2019
o Uganda Bureau of Statistics (2017). The National Population and Housing Census 2014 – Area Specific Profile Series, Kampala, Uganda https://www.ubos.org/wp-
content/uploads/publications/2014CensusProfiles/MITYANA1.pdf
o UNEP (2023). Adaptation Gap Report 2023: Underfinanced. Underprepared – Inadequate investment and planning on climate adaptation leaves world exposed
https://www.unep.org/resources/adaptation-gap-report-2023?utm_source=pocket_saves
o Catalogue: 80+ Local Sustainable Solutions in East Africa 2nd edition, print, 2023 148 pp. ISBN 978-87-970130-6-9:
https://www.inforse.org/africa/pdfs/Catalogue_LocalSustainableSolutions_EastAfrica_March2023_F.pdf