View allAll Photos Tagged ClimateResilience

With his wife.

 

Karimkol runs a nursery in Ala-Buka in Jalalabad region. He grows apple, apricot, cherry, plums and other seedlings before selling them on to farmers. As part of its food security and economic inclusion work, AKF supported Karimkol by providing him weeding equipment to increase his productivity so that he could sell to more farmers. When asked why he grows all these different plants he replied “because it brings me joy.”

Our PPCR Project in Zambia focuses on aquaculture.

 

Copyright CIF 2018

The opening of a new PECTA Tourism Centre at Bulunkul supported by AKF and USAID.

PPCR Monitoring and Reporting Stakeholder Consultation Workshop (April 26th – April 28th, 2017. Washington, D.C

Anna Marks, Global Chair, Deloitte, United Kingdom; Børge Brende, President, World Economic Forum; David Cameron, Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs of the United Kingdom; Faisal Alibrahim, Minister of Economy and Planning of Saudi Arabia; Maroun Kairouz, Head of Middle East and North Africa, World Economic Forum; Mian Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif, Prime Minister of Pakistan; Stéphane Bancel, Chief Executive Officer, Moderna, USA; Speaking in the Closing Plenary: Rejuvenating Growth session at the Special Meeting on Global Collaboration, Growth and Energy for Development 2024.

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 29 April 2024. King Abdul Aziz International Conference Center, Plenary.

Copyright: World Economic Forum/Deepu Das

Field training of Farmer Field Schools (FFS) facilitators and government technicians on the SHARP tablet application for climate resilience assessment was carried out in rural communities across different provinces of Angola in March-April 2015

 

Photo credit must be given ©FAO/Colozza, David

PPCR Monitoring and Reporting Stakeholder Consultation Workshop (April 26th – April 28th, 2017. Washington, D.C

Field training of Farmer Field Schools (FFS) facilitators and government technicians on the SHARP tablet application for climate resilience assessment was carried out in rural communities across different provinces of Angola in March-April 2015

 

Copyright ©FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Choptiany, John

Namala Simonda, 43, cleans Cassava root at her house near Natonga Village. She and her husband are part of the CIF's Pilot Project for Climate Resilience in Zambia

The Climate Investment Fund is supporting projects within the Pilot Project for Climate Resilience in Zambia. The largest plan the in the country is the Barotse Sub Basin, in the country's far western half.

 

The Barotse floodplain in western Zambia is becoming a more difficult place to live and farm as climate change impacts worsen and an old canal system no longer functions. New funding aims to make exposed communities like the ones on the Barotse floodplain more resilient to the effects of climate change - in large part by allowing local people to figure out what changes they think would be most effective and giving them money to carry them out. Zambians say the approach should be more effective and more resistant to corruption.

 

Photo Credit: Jeffrey Barbee/Thomson Reuters Foundation

Maison du Paysan, or House of Farmers, provides a wide variety of trainings, promoting new skills to better adapt to climate change.

 

Copyright CIF 2019

Field training of Farmer Field Schools (FFS) facilitators and government technicians on the SHARP tablet application for climate resilience assessment was carried out in rural communities across different provinces of Angola in March-April 2015

 

Copyright ©FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Choptiany, John

CIF Monitoring and Evaluation officer (background) Akabondo Maina in blue, talks with the Nalunau family while 10 yr old Masheku Nalunau walks past newly cut thatch for their homestead on the Barotse Plain. The Climate Investment Fund is supporting projects within the Pilot Project for Climate Resilience in Zambia. The largest plan the in the country is the Barotse Sub Basin, in the country's far western half.

The Climate Investment Fund is supporting projects within the Pilot Project for Climate Resilience in Zambia. The largest plan the in the country is the Barotse Sub Basin, in the country's far western half.

 

The Barotse floodplain in western Zambia is becoming a more difficult place to live and farm as climate change impacts worsen and an old canal system no longer functions. New funding aims to make exposed communities like the ones on the Barotse floodplain more resilient to the effects of climate change - in large part by allowing local people to figure out what changes they think would be most effective and giving them money to carry them out. Zambians say the approach should be more effective and more resistant to corruption.

 

Photo Credit: Jeffrey Barbee/Thomson Reuters Foundation

Alexander Ling, Associate Professor, National University of Singapore, Singapore; Basma AlBuhairan, Managing Director, Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia; Freeke Heijman, Co-Founder and Director, Ecosystem Development, Quantum Delta, Netherlands; Georges-Olivier Reymond, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, PASQAL, France; Jeremy Jurgens, Managing Director, World Economic Forum; Vikram Sharma, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, QuintessenceLabs, Australia; Speaking in the Workshop: Quantum for All session at the Special Meeting on Global Collaboration, Growth and Energy for Development 2024.

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 28 April 2024. King Abdul Aziz International Conference Center, Al-Ula.

Copyright: World Economic Forum/Deepu Das

Our PPCR Project in Zambia focuses on aquaculture.

 

Copyright CIF 2018

Karimkol runs a nursery in Ala-Buka in Jalalabad region. He grows apple, apricot, cherry, plums and other seedlings before selling them on to farmers. As part of its food security and economic inclusion work, AKF supported Karimkol by providing him weeding equipment to increase his productivity so that he could sell to more farmers. When asked why he grows all these different plants he replied “because it brings me joy.”

Looking accross the river from Tajikistan to Afghanistan on the other side.

Field training of programme staff from organizations under the BRACED consortium (FAO South Sudan, Concern Worldwide, ACTED and The Sudd Institute) on the SHARP tool for climate resilience assessment was carried out in Juba, South Sudan, in November 2015.

 

Copyright ©FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Colozza, David

The World Bank and CIF Administrative Unit Team visited Niger from April 20th to May 5th 2015 to conduct the mid-term review of the Community Action Project for Climate Resilience (CAPCR). This mission included field visits in two regions (Tahoua and Maradi). These field visits demonstrated project achievement and results on the ground and provided real time feedback from beneficiaries.

 

Photo Credit: CIF/Emmanuel Kouassi

Field training of Farmer Field Schools (FFS) facilitators and government technicians on the SHARP tablet application for climate resilience assessment was carried out in rural communities across different provinces of Angola in March-April 2015

 

Copyright ©FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Colozza, David

PPCR Monitoring and Reporting Stakeholder Consultation Workshop (April 26th – April 28th, 2017. Washington, D.C

Maison du Paysan, or House of Farmers, provides improved climate information and services through radio broadcasts.

 

Copyright CIF 2019

This carpenter is creating a door using electic machinery made possible by access to Pamir Energy electicity.

Our PPCR Project in Zambia focuses on aquaculture.

 

Copyright CIF 2018

The ladies of Natonga Village in far western Zambia gather to elect the Ward Development Community members who will oversee the CIF funds in their community. MOre than half of the committee members are women.

The Climate Investment Fund is supporting projects within the Pilot Project for Climate Resilience in Zambia. The largest plan the in the country is the Barotse Sub Basin, in the country's far western half.

 

The Barotse floodplain in western Zambia is becoming a more difficult place to live and farm as climate change impacts worsen and an old canal system no longer functions. New funding aims to make exposed communities like the ones on the Barotse floodplain more resilient to the effects of climate change - in large part by allowing local people to figure out what changes they think would be most effective and giving them money to carry them out. Zambians say the approach should be more effective and more resistant to corruption.

 

Photo Credit: Jeffrey Barbee/Thomson Reuters Foundation

Looking accross the river from Tajikistan to Afghanistan on the other side.

Maison du Paysan, or House of Farmers, provides a wide variety of trainings, promoting new skills to better adapt to climate change.

 

Copyright CIF 2019

SHARP training in Angola on climate resilience assessment, organized under the GEF-funded project "Land rehabilitation and rangelands management in smallholder agro-pastoral production systems

in south western Angola" (RETESA) (GCP/ANG/048/GFF).

 

In the picture: SHARP assessment carried out with a tablet to asses local farmers' climate resilience.

 

Copyright ©FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Choptiany, John

Looking accross the river from Tajikistan to Afghanistan on the other side. A micro-hydel can be seen.

Field training of Farmer Field Schools (FFS) facilitators and government technicians on the SHARP tablet application for climate resilience assessment was carried out in rural communities across different provinces of Angola in March-April 2015

 

Copyright ©FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Choptiany, John

Looking accross the river from Tajikistan to Afghanistan on the other side.

Anwar Gargash, Diplomatic Adviser to the President of the United Arab Emirates; Karin von Hippel, Director-General, Royal United Services Institute, United Kingdom; Samir Saran, President, Observer Research Foundation (ORF), India; Speaking in the Rising Powers for a Multipolar World session at the Special Meeting on Global Collaboration, Growth and Energy for Development 2024.

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 29 April 2024. King Abdul Aziz International Conference Center, Plenary.

Copyright: World Economic Forum/Deepu Das

An alpine lake that sits at an altitude of 3016m.

Speaking in the Global Shapers Welcome Session session at the Special Meeting on Global Collaboration, Growth and Energy for Development 2024. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

27 April 2024. The Ritz-Carlton , Auditorium.

 

Copyright: World Economic Forum/Deepu Das

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