Offshore Small Islands & Riverine Charland In Bangladesh

Background

Bangladesh is frequently cited as one of the most climate-vulnerable countries and simultaneously portrayed as the most resilient nation in the world. Because of its geographical location, major rivers and low-lying deltaic terrain, Bangladesh is highly exposed to the impacts of both slow and rapid-onset climate-driven disasters, including sea-level rise, saline intrusion, cyclones, storm surges, floods, extreme heat and droughts. Its vulnerability is increased by local dependency on agriculture and fisheries based livelihoods - agriculture in Bangladesh still employs over 43% of the country’s workforce and 60% of all employed women - and low adaptive capacity within the government and communities. Small islands and Charlands (riverine island) communities face a particularly high level of exposure to natural disasters due to higher levels of poverty, remoteness and limited access to the mainland, limited access to basic services such as water, sanitation and health, limited transportation services, and reliance on agriculture for livelihoods, migration and climate-induced displacement, inadequate social safety net, etc. The impacts disproportionately affect the poor and are especially severe for women and children. In response to the challenges, the project will enhance the resilience of small island communities, improve climate-induced disaster preparedness and response and build the capacity of local government and communities in climate-resilient development.

Area of Work 

  • Climate-resilient housing (with facility for water supply & facilities for lighting e.g., nano-grids & cooking); 

  • Community-level adaptation interventions (climate-resilient minidisaster shelter/ cluster houses, ecosystem-based adaptation, riverbank management, climate risks maps, early warning, cyclone preparedness programme, floating ambulances, etc.); 

  • Climate-resilient livelihoods & agriculture (e.g., alternative income generating activities, climate-smart agriculture, farmer field school, solar irrigation pump, solar cold storage, etc.); 

  • Capacity building and knowledge management of local government and community (training, local innovation and knowledge center, etc.)

Significant Achievements 

  • The Project is approved by the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) on 17 January 2023 and the TAPP is approved on 25 April 2023. However, the ProDoc was signed on 24 June 2021. 

  • Bangladesh Government appointed Project Director and Deputy Project Director on 7 June 2023.

  • Recruited Project staff and set up PMU office at the DoE. 

  • Conducted 72 community consultation and identified 900 beneficiaries for house retrofitting activity, identified feasible locations for 16 cluster houses, solar irrigation pumps, and adaptation learning centers. 

  • Signed MoUs with CPP 

  • Conducted introductory meetings with Upazila-level government officials and Union Parisad

Objective

The objective of this project is to enhance the climate resilience of vulnerable communities who live on coastal islands and riverine chars in Bangladesh. By adopting a comprehensive and integrated strategy, the project will simultaneously address the effects of climate change across multiple sectors, including water, agriculture, infrastructure and preparedness for disasters in the most climate vulnerable locations, working with individual households to the community level to increase skills and capacities to adapt and reduce impacts of climate change, especially on food security and livelihoods