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Malawi secures $4.4 million in funding from the Global Environment Facility towards building climate resilience in the Lake Chilwa Basin

 Fishermen on a sandy beach work together to repair fishing nets near colorful wooden boats by the water.
Lake Chilwa Basin. Photo: UNDP
Lilongwe, June 2023 – The Global Environment Facility has this week approved $US4.4 million in funding towards a project aimed at reducing the impacts of climate change on vulnerable rural communities in Malawi’s Lake Chilwa Basin.  
 
Supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the five-year project, known as ‘TRANSFORM’, will build the natural, human, and economic adaptive capacity of vulnerable rural communities, catalyzing a shift away from maladaptive practices that degrade natural resources while reducing the country’s greenhouse gas emissions. Around 80,000 people in Machinga, Zomba, and Phalombe districts are to directly benefit. 
 
"Climate change poses a major threat to Malawi’s development – and in fact, on the ground, many Malawians are already struggling because of its impacts," said Minister for Natural Resources and Climate Change, Hon. Michael Usi. "This project focuses on building resilience in one of our most vulnerable regions, the Lake Chilwa Basin. We look forward to working with our partners at the UN Development Programme and others to ensure it delivers tangible benefits to communities and helps us build a better future." 
 
Communities in the Lake Chilwa basin rely on local natural resources – forests, fisheries, wetlands – for their livelihoods. However, rising temperatures, changes in rainfall, and more frequent and intense droughts and floods are reducing water levels of the lake, affecting fish populations, and disrupting local farming. The changes are pushing households beyond their traditional coping mechanisms and leading to practices that further exacerbate land degradation (for example, expanding fields to offset declining harvests). 
 
With a strong focus on nature-based solutions, the project will benefit people and the ecosystems by strengthening livelihoods and scaling-up finance for more sustainable, climate-resilient enterprises. Specifically, the project will: 
  • Enhance the capacity of communities and institutions to plan, implement and monitor ecosystem-based adaptation and natural resource management (for example, wetland restoration); 
  • Improve small-scale producers’ access to lucrative markets for climate-resilient products and value chains (for example, climate-resilient agriculture products, sustainable briquettes, and eco-tourism), as well as improve access to microfinance, social protection, and insurance; and 
  • Facilitate the adoption of alternative climate-resilient livelihoods (10,000 households will be supported to take up alternative livelihoods, such as producing sustainable briquettes and fisheries).
 
“We are delighted to have supported Malawi in securing funding for this important new project and look forward to supporting its implementation,” said UNDP Resident Representative in Malawi, Mr. Shigeki Komatsubara. “UNDP is a long-standing partner of the Government, having been in-country since 1964, and we remain dedicated to helping the government secure a more prosperous, inclusive, low-carbon future. This includes advancing adaptation, increasing access to (renewable) energy in remote areas, climate-informed policy development and planning, and, ultimately raising – and realizing – the country’s climate targets under the global Paris Agreement." 
 
The funding from the Global Environment Facility-Least Developed Countries Fund joins US$15,851,000 in co-finance from the Government of Malawi and US$ 5.6 million from UN agencies. It is expected that the practices and lessons learned from the project will be scalable across the country. 
 
Link to project page: https://www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/transformational-adaptation-climate-resilience-lake-chilwa-basin-malawi-transform 
 
ABOUT UNDP 
 
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) is the UN's global development network, advocating for change and connecting countries to knowledge, experience, and resources to help people build better lives. The UNDP works in over 170 countries and territories, helping to eradicate poverty, reduce inequalities, and build resilience to crises and shocks.  Globally UNDP remains the largest service provider in the UN system on climate change adaptation and since 2002 has successfully completed 151 adaptation projects across 74 countries, including 41 Least Developed Countries. 
 
To learn more about UNDP’s work, please visit www.undp.org/

For more information, contact UNDP Malawi Communications comms.support.mw@undp.org