Tag: GEF

  • NITDA, GEF renew strategic partnership to boost Africa’s tech entrepreneurship

    NITDA, GEF renew strategic partnership to boost Africa’s tech entrepreneurship

    A major highlight of the GEF Business Mixer held in Accra was the renewal of the strategic partnership between the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) and the Global Entrepreneurship Festival (GEF).

    Representing the Director-General, Dr. Aristotle Onumu, NITDA reaffirmed its commitment to advancing Africa’s tech-driven entrepreneurial ecosystem. 

    The signing of a new Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) formalises a strengthened collaboration aimed at supporting digital startups, fostering innovation, and accelerating Africa’s global technology competitiveness.

    Read Also: UN, NHRC, NITDA advocate human rights protection in AI deployment 

    Speaking at the event, Dr. Summy Smart Francis, Project Lead for GEF, stressed that partnerships like NITDA’s are essential for transforming Nigeria’s “pregnant ideas” into scalable solutions that can revolutionize industries and communities.

    The renewed MoU sets the foundation for deeper public-private sector engagement, ensuring that GEF 2025 serves as a launchpad for the next generation of Nigerian tech entrepreneurs.

    GEF, the world’s largest entrepreneurship event, is scheduled to take place from November 21 to 23, under the theme: “The AI Entrepreneur: Creating a Sustainable Future.”

  • GEF, UNDP, REA kick-off 23 additional mini-grids

    GEF, UNDP, REA kick-off 23 additional mini-grids

    The Rural Electrification Agency (REA) has conveyed the Africa Mini-Grids Program (AMP) Grant Award Ceremony in Abuja, signaling the kick off of the development of 23 additional mini-grids across six geo-political zones in Nigeria, with capacity ranging from 30Kwp to 200Kwp. 

     In a bid to advance the nation’s clean energy ecosystem and catalyse socio-economic development through the deployment of clean energy infrastructure for agricultural development, the agency has advanced the implementation of the Africa Mini-grids Program. 

    An impact-focused initiative active in 21 countries, the Africa Mini-Grids Program (AMP), launched in 2022, is being funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Nigeria. 

    A statement on the programme at the weekend said: “On Friday the 31st of January 2025, the REA convened the AMP Grant Award Ceremony, signaling the kick off of the development of 23 additional mini-grids across 6 geo-political zones in Nigeria, with capacity ranging from 30Kwp to 200Kwp.”

    This intervention is designed to impact over 70,000 Nigerians, enabling over 600 productive use connections and over 375 social connections. 

    Eighteen renewable energy developers have been awarded grant agreements to the tune of $5.91 million.

    Since its activation, the REA has worked in lockstep with the GEF, the UNDP, the Federal Ministry of Environment and other frontline stakeholders in the energy access ecosystem to develop and strengthen community-centered objectives of the AMP. 

    The GEF-funded AMP has enabled the sector to further x-ray the rural agricultural value chains, while creating a pathway for accelerated, sustainable energy access in last-mile Nigeria.

    The AMP’s innovative model further guarantees that public and private stakeholders work in lockstep in their commitment to sustainable energy solutions for agricultural development and food security in Nigeria.

  • GEF, FAO, FG to transform oil palm production, others in Niger Delta

    GEF, FAO, FG to transform oil palm production, others in Niger Delta

    The Global Environment Fund (GEF), in partnership with the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and the Federal government are targeting to transform the Niger Delta’s cocoa and palm oil production systems and landscapes towards sustainability and resilience, delivering multiple environmental and social benefits through its compartmental activities.

    The organisations and the government are implementing Food Systems, Land Use, and Restoration (FOLUR) in Ondo state and Cross River State with the target to protect the forest reserves from encroachment as a result of agricultural activities.

    Speaking at the Opening Ceremony of FAO-GEF 7 FOLUR National Inception Workshop in Abuja with the theme: “Promoting Integrated Landscape Management and Sustainable Food Systems in the Niger Delta of Nigeria”, the Acting Country Representative of the FAO, Dominique Kouacou, said the landscape of Nigeria’s Niger Delta region holds tremendous ecological significance, recognised internationally for its lowland tropical rainforests with high conservation value and carbon stock.

    Kouacou, who was represented by Mrs Nifesimi Ogunkua, said the region is experiencing alarming rates of deforestation, primarily driven by agricultural expansion, especially in cocoa and oil palm cultivation.

    Read Also: Truncated education, lost livelihoods: NEDC renews efforts to rebuild insurgency-ravaged Northeast

    He noted that the implementation of the GEF-7 FOLUR-IP project is anticipated to yield numerous benefits, including, 795,200 hectares of landscapes covered by Integrated Land Management plans, 110,000 hectares of land under sustainable practices with at least a 20% increase in the yield of cocoa and oil palm per hectare by project closure.

    “Restoration of 18,800 hectares of degraded forest landscape, Sequestration of 15.6 million tons of CO2, 10,000 people benefiting from income diversification interventions, with a target of at least 50% women”, he said.

    The National Project Coordinator of FOLUR, Professor Oladapo Akinyemi, the project is basically promoting land use and the food system in the Niger Delta region with focus on Ondo state and Cross River state.

    He said the project supported by Global Environment Facility (GEF) being implemented by the FAO and the Forestry Research Institute of Nigeria (FRIN) is the operational partner to the FAO.

    Akinyemi said the project is also aimed at training the farmers in such a way the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) through the Anchor Borrowers Program (ABP) will provide funds for the farmers to increase their yield.

    ”Through this project, there is a designated number of hectares of land that will be restored “GEF is providing the grant for this project, supported by the FAO, the Federal Government is also co-funding the project in terms of human capital support, Ondo State has promised to support the project with $7500 same as the Cross River State government. The CBN has promised to release loans to the farmers under the ABP so that they can practice agriculture in a sustainable manner”, he added.

    The Minister of State for Environment and Ecological Management, Dr Iziak Salako, said the implementation of this project especially in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria will unlock the potential of the region to regain its pride of place in food production and its status as a global biodiversity hotspot.

  • IFAD, GEF lift economy of 78m smallholder farmers across 100 countries

    IFAD, GEF lift economy of 78m smallholder farmers across 100 countries

    Seventy-eight million smallholder farmers across 100 countries have benefitted from existing interventions by the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and the Global Environment Facility (GEF).

    Joint investments in small-scale farming in developing countries not only increase vulnerable rural people’s capacity to cope with the ever-increasing climatic and economic shocks, but significantly benefit the environment and climate by helping to reduce greenhouse gases emissions, recovering degraded land and curbing biodiversity loss, according a new joint report recently launched by the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and the Global Environment Facility (GEF).

    “IFAD’s partnership with GEF benefits 78 million people across 100 countries, improving their livelihoods and delivering resilience-building solutions across food systems, climate and nature,” said Jyotsna Puri, Associate Vice-President of the Strategy and Knowledge Department at IFAD.

    “Together our organisations assemble finance to have a catalytic impact on rural communities across the globe and facilitate a multiplier effect on the systems and institutions they are critical to,” added the Associate Vice-President of IFAD, the only UN specialised agency and international financial institution that focuses exclusively on reducing poverty and improving food security in rural areas in developing countries.

    Read Also: First Lady’s RHI awards scholarships to 46 tertiary students

    The partnership with GEF enables IFAD to boost its work to support sustainable land and water management, climate-smart agriculture, agroecology, biodiversity conservation, climate adaptation, and resilience building, says the new IFAD-GEF Advantage III Report.

    For instance, one project aimed at developing family farming, co-funded by IFAD and GEF, restored 30,000 hectares of degraded land in Niger. In doing so, this programme prevented the emission of 5.25 million tonnes of CO2, while recovering nearly 190,000 hectares through ‘Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration’ practices, which foster regrowth of trees to increase woody vegetation.

    IFAD-GEF collaboration has also helped unlock innovation at country level, highlights the report. In Cambodia, ‘testing grants’ de-risked the adoption process of Renewable Energy Technologies (RET) by supporting the proofing and validation by small-scale farmers and small and medium enterprises.

    These grants were followed by other ‘roll-out grants’ through a co-financing approach with companies to establish local supply chains, training and after-sales services.

    As a result, nearly 18,000 small-scale farmers have adopted different RET, such as solar dryers for food processing, portable solar water pumps to irrigate crops, biochar briquettes to heat newly hatched chicks, solar poultry incubators to heat eggs, and solar hydroponics to grow vegetables with less water.

    IFAD’s ability to bundle different sources of development finance unlocks new possibilities to address pressing global challenges such as transforming the way we produce, transport, store and consume food.

    Together with its sister agency, the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), IFAD co-leads the new Food Systems Integrated Program of the GEF, whereby an estimated US$230 million – to be complemented by additional co-financing – will be directed through grants to support countries working to transform their agrifood systems to be more sustainable and to deliver global environmental benefits.

    The currently active portfolio of IFAD-GEF operations represents a total investment of nearly US$200 million in 35 global projects on agriculture and rural development across all world regions.

    Recent project approvals in 2022 and 2023 alone represent more than US$64 million in GEF grants, with significant co-financing of over US$347million.

    Besides, 13 projects in 18 countries and totalling almost US$ 100 million are at the design stage in the IFAD-GEF pipeline and a ‘soft pipeline’ of projects being scoped out comes to almost another US$100 million.

    IFAD is an international financial institution and a United Nations specialised agency.

    Based in Rome – the United Nations food and agriculture hub – IFAD invests in rural people, empowering them to reduce poverty, increase food security, improve nutrition and strengthen resilience. Since 1978, we have provided more than US$24 billion in grants and low-interest loans to fund projects in developing countries.