vra experiences

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VRA experiences Namibia Niger By Katiella and Nickey

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VRA experiences. Niger. Namibia. By Katiella and Nickey. Adjusting Community Based NRM Practices to reduce climate change risk in the Omusati Region. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: VRA experiences

VRA experiences

Namibia

Niger

By Katiella and Nickey

Page 2: VRA experiences

Adjusting Community Based NRM Practices to reduce climate change risk in the Omusati Region.

The objective of the Project is to increase community-level capacity to be able to adapt to climate change through implementation of sustainable natural resources management practices at four (4) farming communities in Onkani arid lands and the surroundings.

Page 3: VRA experiences

Outcomes

Outcome A Outputs Funding source

1. Capacity for soil conservation increased in the face of climate change risks.

1.1 Training in cost-effective soil conservation and monitoring methods.1.2 Demonstration projects developed on farms1.3 Local level monitoring of soil, vegetation and livestock initiatives in selected villages

Co-financeGoJ

2. Capacity for small-scale rain water harvesting increased 2.1 Training in cost-effective water harvesting methods.2.2 Rain water harvesting pilot examples established at schools in surrounding villages including Onkani Primary school2.3 Selected HH provided with rain water harvesting infrastructure

Co-financeGoJ

3. Community capacity to maintaining hand-made wells improved 3.1 Training in cost-effective of maintenance at Onkaankaa and Elamba.3.2. Improving hand-made wells infrastructure in selected villages

Co-financeGoJ

USD 53,235.28

Page 4: VRA experiences

Outcomes

Outcome B Outputs Funding source

4. Increased forest cover (using appropriate, drought resistant species) reduces climate change-induced land degradation pressures by improving soil permeability and reducing evapotranspiration

4.1 Training in tree planting and agroforestry4.2 Tree-planting and agroforestry campaigns led by farmers implemented in climate-threatened areas: Ondjungulume and Onakapya4.3 Identification and introduction of indigenous and appropriately adapting forestry species in selected areas4.4 Fire management activities implemented

CBA

5. Community awareness raised about long-term climate change risks

5.1 Trainings held on climate change risks5.2 School awareness packages developed5.3 Other CC related and relevant information distributed to communities

CBA

6. Lessons learned from project implementation shared with stakeholders nationally and globally

6.1 CC forums with policymakers held (at least one parliament session presentation by OIKE)6.2 Forums with relevant extension services held6.3 Progress reports and other informational materials shared with CBA team globally for dissemination to other country programmes and included in globally focused knowledge products

CBA

USD 45,954.13

Page 5: VRA experiences

VRA Process

• About 50 people invited/participated initially

• Later, only representatives from four targeted villages

• People collected with two vehicles• Lunch provided (traditional dish)• Other stakeholders invited.. CPP…

grn..

• Brainstorming done on CC• CC/Greenhouse explain by CPP

experts• VRA process rationaled• Other PRA methods blended with VRA

- only one big piece of paper (ZOPP)• Three quarters of a day on VRA• In the end …experience appreciated

Page 6: VRA experiences

Some lessons

CC not technically known by villagers

A brainstorming session on Climate Change indicated that the community is not really conversant with CC.

They might have experience CC in their villages but never discussed is as such within a bigger group or even at home.

The CC technical terms are new to them.

Therefore…….

• ..the VRA session to be preceded by a thorough session on CCA.

• TRANSLATION

• discussion on CC in every community meetings starting with the CBA planning sessions and will be continued with the implementation of the project.

Page 7: VRA experiences

The H-Form

Page 8: VRA experiences

Supporting Adaptation of Productive Practices among Pastoral and Agro pastoral Communities in the Rombou Rural

Commune (Dakoro Department)

• Objective: The objective of the project is to build the capacity of the community to engage in livelihood practices that will maintain and strengthen ecosystem resilience in the face of climate change including variability

• Outcomes Co-Financed• Traditional wells rehabilitated (co-financing)• Creation of grain and seed banks to promote better-adapted and climate-resilient

seeds and to provide a buffer against food insecurity stemming from increasing climate variability (co-financing)

• Outcomes Core SPA• Water points protected against climate-driven siltation, erosion and desertification

(Tree-planting around water points)• Alternative NRM practices piloted in the Tarka valley to promote ecosystem resilience

in the face of climate change (Piloting of cultivated forage, Piloting of dune fixation measures using hedgerows, Piloting of degraded land restoration measures)

• Community members trained to implement and monitor climate-resilient natural resource management practices.

• Lessons learned from project implementation integrated into local-level planning

USD 145,000.00

Page 9: VRA experiences

Development of sustainable agricultural techniques for adapting to climate change in three villages in the municipality of

Roumbou, Department of Dakoro

Objective: The objective of the project is to build the capacity of the community to engage in livelihood practices that will contribute to the reduction of climate change-driven soil erosion pressures.

Outcomes Co-Financed• Measures piloted to restore degraded land (25 hectares of degraded land restored, including

5 hectares of dunes• Community members trained to implement and monitor land reclamation practices.

Outcomes Core SPA• Decreasingly sustainable exploitation of natural ecosystems and extensive agricultural

practices replaced with intensive practices which will reduce deforestation and be more sustainable in the face of long-term climate change pressures.

– A community-managed bank of agricultural inputs instituted– Demonstration of quick-maturing seeds– 15 community-level “brigadiers” trained to disseminate identified best practices in

climate resilient agriculture locally– Agricultural implements provided to the most vulnerable households (less than 10

households, who would otherwise be forced to subsist on clime-stressed ecosystems)

• Lessons learned from project implementation integrated into local-level planning

USD 61,000.00

Page 10: VRA experiences

SPECIFIC FACILITATION TECHNIQUES

• Background on climate change and explanation on the VRA methodology given.

• Questions repeated several times

• More than one facilitator effective and culturally appropriate.

• Follow up questions asked which successfully elicited detailed information on how climate change impacts have manifested themselves in the communities.

• Opinions of different gender and age groups actively solicited.

• Appropriate use of humour and other cultural tools can help to test the accuracy of the community answers

Page 11: VRA experiences

VRA and Gender

• For most of OIKE project…it is women

• Roles and Responsibilities shared if not equal….almost within all set-ups

• Young man and women actively engage but not as desired

• SGP principle of gender consideration in projects brushed

Page 12: VRA experiences

What can done?

• Introduce the VRA at NCC and field facilitators levels before the community meeting

• Translate into local languages for all questions need to be agreed before going to the meeting.

• Comprehensive scoring system

• Need to limit participant group size

• To prepare and adapt the first question of VRA for the target group.

• Baseline-additionality reasoning must be clearly understood

• Reduce the number of questions

Page 13: VRA experiences

CHALLENGES

• Levels to measure indicators

• Accuracy of the Baseline

• VRA and other existing local M&E tools

• VRA quantitative data?