1. Home
  2. Co-designing effective Nature-based Solutions in coastal West Africa
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY

Co-designing effective Nature-based Solutions in coastal West Africa

IATI Identifier: GB-GOV-26-OODA-NERC-Q6QMM8N-HRZZ6ZK-XTWJRVV
Project disclaimer
Disclaimer: The data for this page has been produced from IATI data published by DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY. Please contact them (Show Email Address) if you have any questions about their data.

Description

Communities living near coasts are increasingly at risk from coastal flooding as climate change raises sea-levels and causes storms to occur more frequently. Mangrove forests can help protect communities from this threat, as they reduce the energy of waves and storm surges, and trap sediment to help coasts keep pace with rising sea levels. Despite their benefit, a third of mangroves in West Africa have been lost since 1980. Mangrove wood is an important source of fuel and construction material for communities living nearby, and there are also pressures to use the land mangroves grow on for salt production and rice farming. Many interventions have been tried to protect mangroves, but these can have far-reaching consequences for people and the environment, and create novel mangrove landscapes which may not protect communities in the same way as natural mangroves. This project will generate new knowledge about the feedbacks from different interventions and the effectiveness of different mangrove landscapes at protecting communities, and use this to support communities in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to design solutions to protect and restore mangroves, and protect themselves from climate change risks. We will build on the knowledge communities have of mangroves, their changes and their relationship with people, and work with communities to imagine different ways of living with mangroves. We will then collect the evidence needed to evaluate these different scenarios. This includes making measurements and models of how different mangrove landscapes protect communities from flooding, looking at how sensitive this protection is to processes such as mining or forest loss along the rivers upstream of the mangroves, and seeing whether different strategies to protect mangroves affect some people more than others. We will examine these results with communities, refining scenarios and models to arrive at co-designed solutions. We will then work with communities to identify whether they have the power to implement these solutions, and identify how governments and other organisations can help support communities to protect and restore mangroves. We will assess whether the suitability of different approaches for protecting and restoring mangroves depends on the environment or on social factors. For example, some rivers carry a lot of sediment which could be trapped by small areas of mangroves, while other rivers have less sediment which may not be effectively trapped by small patches of mangroves. Likewise, options for people to switch from cutting mangroves to getting wood from alternative sources will depend on how close other forests are, the amount of land available for planting new trees, and the ease of bringing wood in from further afield. We will work in six different river catchments in three countries in West Africa, which differ in many environmental and social characteristics including how close they are to urban areas where products can be easily bought or sold, the amount of forest loss along the rivers and experience of past civil conflicts. We will work with communities in three areas within each catchment, allowing us to see the effect of differences in livelihoods and customs on possible solutions. These lessons learnt about the importance of context will be valuable for informing efforts to protect and restore mangroves across the region.

Objectives

The overarching aim of this project is to work with communities in six areas to build scenarios, informed by a combination of environmental science, social science and community knowledge, where mangroves provide nature-based solutions to support climate resilience. In doing so, the project aims to tackle to two major research challenges: (1) the need to consider mangroves as parts of whole socio-ecological systems, including feedbacks between environmental and social factors, and (2) the need to consider coastal ecosystems in a source-to-sea context and understand upstream and downstream feedbacks affecting them. The project has the following objectives: Conduct participatory scenario-building activities with communities to develop potential nature-based solutions and explore their costs and benefits. Determine how local and catchment-scale processes influence the effectiveness of mangroves in protecting against climate risks. Explore communities' lived experiences of mangrove nature-based solutions to identify whether different nature-based solutions produce different outcomes for community resilience. Identify how the costs and benefits of nature-based solutions vary within communities to affect household-scale resilience. Assess how the suitability of different mangrove nature-based solutions varies across catchments with contrasting ecological, geomorphological, social and political characteristics. Identify the scales at which socio-ecological feedbacks occur, and assess the alignment of this with the scales at which governance occurs. Examine how local and catchment-scale factors influence the temporal sustainability of mangrove nature-based solutions in a changing climate.


Location

The country, countries or regions that benefit from this Programme.
Western Africa, regional
Disclaimer: Country borders do not necessarily reflect the UK Government's official position.

Status Implementation

The current stage of the Programme, consistent with the International Aid Transparency Initiative's (IATI) classifications.

Programme Spend

Programme budget and spend to date, as per the amounts loaded in financial system(s), and for which procurement has been finalised.

Participating Organisation(s)

Help with participating organisations

Accountable:Organisation responsible for oversight of the activity

Extending: Organisation that manages the budget on behalf of the funding organisation.

Funding: Organisation which provides funds.

Implementing: Organisations implementing the activity.

Sectors

Sector groups as a percentage of total Programme budget according to the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) classifications.

Budget

A comparison across financial years of forecast budget and spend to date on the Programme.

Download IATI Data for GB-GOV-26-OODA-NERC-Q6QMM8N-HRZZ6ZK-XTWJRVV