COLOMBO – Azusa Kubota, Resident Representative of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) in Sri Lanka, entered into 29 Memorandums of Agreement (MoA) with Community Based Organizations on behalf of the Global Environment Facility funded Small Grants Program (GEF SGP) recently.
Twenty community grant projects, along with three capacity development, three knowledge management and three social enterprise development grants will be funded under GEF-SGP seventh Operational Phase (OP7) in Sri Lanka.
Attending the signing were B.K. Prabath Chandrakeerthi, Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Sophie Gordan, Second Secretary (Development), Australian High Commission in Sri Lanka, representatives from the Ministry of Environment, which is the Operational Focal Point, the National Steering Committee, Donor partner and Grantees.
MoAs were also signed with five community grant projects funded by Australia through the Community-Based Adaptation (CBA) Phase III project. The projects will focus on environmental conservation, strengthening community resilience against climate shocks and disasters, which is essential for environmental, economic, and social well-being, reducing inequalities and advancing the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to achieve agenda 2030.
Commenting on the initiatives, B.K. Prabath Chandrakeerthi, Secretary, Ministry of Environment, noting that Sri Lanka’s designation as an upgraded country program within the GEF-SGP framework presents a unique opportunity, said “We now have the chance to refine and broadly apply a community-based landscape approach, leveraging the wealth of experience gained from other SGP countries, sectors, and regions. By incorporating these lessons and tapping into well-developed civil society and market networks, we can ensure that our efforts are even more impactful.”
Both the GEF-SGP 7th Operational Phase and CBA Phase III will be implemented in three key landscapes: the urban wetlands of Colombo, Knuckles conservation forest and the coastal region from Mannar island to Jaffna. The GEF-SGP 7 will fund 20 community grants designed to address critical environmental challenges such as biodiversity conservation, climate change mitigation and adaptation, and land degradation. Whereas the 5 community grants from CBA 3 will give more focus on building climate-resilient communities, with an overall emphasis on the need to equip vulnerable groups like women, youth, persons with disabilities, and indigenous peoples, to improve resilience to challenges such as pandemics, economic downturns, and social crises.
Highlighting UNDPs leadership through the GEF-SGP program over the years, Azusa Kubota, noted that since 1994, UNDP in Sri Lanka has been supporting community-based organizations to demonstrate innovative and bottom-up approaches in their efforts to protect the environment and contribute to global efforts through local action under the Small Grants Programme (SGP) of the Global Environment Facility (GEF). “We are very excited to scale up our ambition through a new cohort of 20 projects to build the resilience of local communities to withstand climate shocks and improve environmental, economic, and social well-being in our collective efforts to achieve the SDGs,” she added.
Key thematic areas of the CBA Phase III project include water security, coastal zone management, agriculture and food security, land degradation, and disaster risk reduction.
Underscoring the commitment of the Government of Australia, Sophie Gordan said strengthening the resilience of local communities to climate shocks and disasters was vital not only for environmental sustainability but also for advancing economic well-being and reducing inequalities. “Through an inclusive, community-led approach, CBA Phase III empowers vulnerable groups to adapt to both current and future challenges,” she added.
In addition to the community grants, GEF SGP OP7 includes specialized grants aimed at enhancing capacity development, fostering knowledge management, and promoting social enterprise development within the targeted landscapes.
The Small Grants Program embodies the very essence of sustainable development by ‘thinking globally acting locally’. By providing financial and technical support to projects that conserve and restore the environment while enhancing people’s well-being and livelihoods, SGP demonstrates that community action can maintain the fine balance between human needs and environmental imperatives.
The Small Grants Programme is supported by UNDP and funded by the Global Environment Facility.
-ENCL
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