TECHNICAL SUPPORT

Kenyan innovators to benefit from Sh220 million fund

Past winners designed projects that help poor communities overcome climate change problems

In Summary

• The initiative empowers local actors and contributes to the principles for locally led adaptation action, which have been endorsed by UNDP and partners around the world. 

• The new funding proposals will benefit from the technical support and know-how of the Adaptation Innovation Marketplace.

Farmers plant maize in Cherangany, Trans Nzoia county
Farmers plant maize in Cherangany, Trans Nzoia county
Image: FILE

Innovators in Kenya will benefit from a Sh220 million fund to design projects to overcome challenges brought by climate change.

The United Nations Development Programme and partners of the Adaptation Innovation Marketplace said they will fund 22 local innovators across 19 countries, including Kenya.

The first round of funding through the Adaptation Fund Climate Innovation Accelerator window will enhance local climate action and accelerate the delivery of targets outlined in the Paris Agreement and Sustainable Development Goals.

The initiative empowers local actors and contributes to the principles for locally led adaptation action, which have been endorsed by UNDP and partners around the world. 

The new funding proposals will benefit from the technical support and know-how of the Adaptation Innovation Marketplace.

Launched by UNDP administrator Achim Steiner at the Climate Adaptation Summit in January 2021, AIM is a strategic platform that promotes scaled-up adaptation at the local level, focusing on civil society, NGOs, and women and youth innovators.

The marketplace crowds in resources, know-how and support to facilitate local access to climate change finance.

The AIM partners  provide technical support to the Adaptation Fund Climate Innovation Accelerator.

They include the International Centre for Climate Change and Development, the Least Developed Countries Universities Consortium on Climate Change, the Global Resilience Partnership, the Climate-Knowledge Innovation Community, and the UN Capital Development Fund.

This year, AIM partners will collaborate on knowledge sharing and South-South Coordination for the 22 local partners awarded grants in the first round of AFCIA grant giving.

Winning proposals varied from advanced aquaculture in India and expanding the production of climate resilient acai berries in Brazil to the reintroduction of ancient climate-resilient construction techniques in the Sahel and the creation of “blue jobs” in Micronesia.

Grants were awarded across 19 countries, including seven from Africa, 11 from Asia, and four from the Latin America and Caribbean region. Ten out of the 22 were from the least developed countries or small island developing states. 

The grants focused on resilient agriculture, technology, community-based adaptation, ecosystem-based payments and services, and entrepreneurship. The second call for proposals opens in June 2022.

“By supporting locally driven climate innovations, these grants enable us to rethink the way we support climate resilient development,"  Srilata Kammila, UNDP’s head of Climate Change Adaptation, said.

"This means embracing the UN’s New Way of Working and Grand Bargain agreements, breaking down silos, working across society, following the localisation agenda, and scaling up locally led adaptations.”

Edited by A.N

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