The Jerusalem Post

Under attack from climate change, Colombia’s farmers befriend nature

- • By ANASTASIA MOLONEY

SUCRE, Colombia (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Forced to leave his small farm a decade ago to escape the worst floods in Colombia’s recent history, Manuel Jimenez knows the destructio­n torrential rains can inflict only too well.

“The floods left behind a desert, a cemetery of dead trees and poisonous snakes. Everything was destroyed. We lost our home, crops and animals,” said the 43-year-old farmer in Pasifueres, a remote village in the northern province of Sucre.

“We lived through a cruel tragedy,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Ten years on, as climate change bites, local farmers are learning to adapt to the impacts of wilder weather by working with nature, from restoring wetlands to planting trees and growing hardy rice varieties, backed by internatio­nal funding.

The 2010 flooding, triggered by heavy downpours, killed about 300 people and displaced 2.2 million more, causing billions of dollars in damages across 1 million hectares (3,860 square miles).

Hardest-hit were poor farming communitie­s in La Mojana, a region stretching across four northern provinces.

Aid officials warn extreme weather, from torrential rains to drought, will strike again and likely become the new normal.

Some parts of La Mojana are prone to drought, while others are experienci­ng more intense rains, said Jimena Puyana, who heads work on sustainabl­e developmen­t in Colombia for the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP).

But rural communitie­s are fighting back.

With nearly $8 million of UN funding since 2013, about 6,000 farming and fishing families in three municipali­ties of La Mojana have introduced a series of measures to adapt to climate shifts and cope better with extreme weather.

The approach focuses on so-called “nature-based solutions” – which involves improving ecosystems, including forests, wetlands and watersheds – led by village farmer associatio­ns, rather than building infrastruc­ture like dikes and levees to contain floods.

One of the main methods is to restore the wetlands and waterways that regulate the local water supply so that they can act as natural drainage systems and buffers against storms.

Prolonged flooding and sediment build-up from illegal gold mining have damaged the wetlands around farming villages, disrupting the water’s natural flow and channels.

“What we are seeking to do is to recover the capacity of the region’s water systems,” said Francisco Charry, head of climate change at Colombia’s environmen­t ministry, which is leading the project in partnershi­p with the UNDP.

Climate change is worsening the conditions faced by vulnerable communitie­s that are prone to flooding, he added.

“(They) need to find a way to adapt to this new reality,” he said.

At Pasifueres village, about 9 km (5.6 miles) of streams and creeks running alongside homes have so far been mapped using drones, and then deepened and widened both by hand and dredgers.

For the past four years, Yenifer Jimenez, not related to Manuel, has led a group of farmers who clear rubbish and weeds to unblock the streams each month.

“We clean the streams constantly so that the water can run its natural course. This gives us protection,” Jimenez said.

Along the bank, farmers have also planted trees that act as a natural flood barrier.

“The life of this community has been reborn with the rehabilita­tion of the streams. The waters don’t reach the houses anymore,” said Jimenez.

The 30-year old, who belongs to a farmers’ associatio­n working on adaptation, said villagers were no longer afraid of the rains.

“We can take torrential rains now. I don’t think another flood would affect us like it did 10 years ago. We’re better prepared,” she added.

They have also built about 10 straw-and-wood houses with zinc roofs, as well as several community centers, all elevated above ground to protect them from flooding.

Nearby, a small medicinal herb, fruit and vegetable garden of pepper, plantain and cassava trees has been created with a drip irrigation system. It provides women and their families with food to eat and produce to sell at the local market.

Charry said communitie­s now understood a changing climate was affecting their food security. “They are learning to co-exist with this new situation,” he added.

A two-hour drive away, along a dusty path passing thatched homes scattered among cattle and buffalo pastures and rice fields, another group of farmers at El Torno village is also trying to beat climate change.

Along with a high risk of floods, rising temperatur­es mean farmers here lack water in the summer months. With no running water, they rely on water collected from deep wells.

Using seeds grown in new nurseries, farmers are planting trees and mangroves along the edges of nearby wetlands to create a natural wall and reduce the risk of floods.

In addition, nearly 2,800 hectares of native rice that is more resilient to high temperatur­es have been planted by farmer associatio­ns in La Mojana.

With $117 million in funding from donors and the Colombian government – including $38 million from the Green Climate Fund, which supports climate action in developing countries – these measures are now being rolled out to nine more flood-prone municipali­ties in La Mojana over the next eight years.

“We can breathe again. The birds are singing again. We began to love our land again,” said Jimenez.

 ?? (John Vizcaino/Reuters) ?? An aerial view of a flooded area in the municipali­ty of San Marcos in Sucre province May 20, 2011. Downpours due to La Nina have rocked the Andean nation since last year, displacing 3.8 million people and killing almost 450, authoritie­s said.
(John Vizcaino/Reuters) An aerial view of a flooded area in the municipali­ty of San Marcos in Sucre province May 20, 2011. Downpours due to La Nina have rocked the Andean nation since last year, displacing 3.8 million people and killing almost 450, authoritie­s said.

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