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Climate Change

Wednesday
30 Sep 2020

Niger: $5.6 Million from AfDB to Deal with Climate Change

30 Sep 2020  by esi-africa.com   

The AfDB will disburse $5,6 million to Niger to implement its Africa Disaster Risk Management Funding Programme (ADRiFi).

With two-thirds of its surface covered by desert, Niger is experiencing severe and recurrent food crises, a situation exacerbated by the droughts resulting from climate change. Image: Pixabay.

The financing comes from the African Development Fund ADF-15 as technical and institutional support to strengthen Niger’s resilience and response to drought-related disasters. The project, which totals $8million, will be co-financed by the Bank’s group concessional rate loan window and the Pan-African mutual managed fund, a risk contribution in kind of $1million and the Nigerien government of $1,4 million euro.

ADRiFi in Niger is meant to strengthen the country’s resilience and response to climate shocks by improving its disaster risk management and adaptation to climate change. Thus it will provide technical and financial support to the Nigerien government. This will happen through capacity building in terms of drought risk assessment, prevention of drought-related food crises and development of contingency plans; and the transfer of sovereign risk through the subscription of insurance against drought risks with the pan-African risk management mutual, African Risk Capacity.

Niger needs help to feed its people

AfDB director-general for West Africa, Marie Laure Akin Olugbade, said: “This funding comes at the right time because Niger is now suffering the full force of the impacts of climate change, which each time harms household income, the performance of the agricultural sector, economic growth and the macroeconomic balance of the country, in particular the State budget and the balance of payments.”

Through the ADRiFi programme, AfDB is helping the Niger State preserve its budget against potential drought shocks as the country tries to revive its economy. The programme will be implemented from 2020 to 2023 in Niger, in line with its national food and nutrition security and sustainable agricultural development strategy initiative Nigeriens Nourishing Nigeriens (I3N) which is about securing zero hunger in Niger.

The programme is also in line with two of the AfDB’s five strategic priorities, namely feed Africa and improve the quality of life of Africans. The Niger project is the fifth to be approved under ADRiFi, after Gambia, Madagascar, Zimbabwe and Mauritania.

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