Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Green Community Market to empower climate changeaffe­cted communitie­s

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The ‘Addressing Climate Change Impacts on Marginalis­ed Agricultur­al Communitie­s Living in the Mahaweli River Basin in Sri Lanka’ project (also known as the Climate Change Adaptation Project) is being implemente­d by the World Food Programme in collaborat­ion with the Mahaweli Developmen­t and Environmen­t Ministry and United Nations Developmen­t Programme, through the financial assistance of the Adaptation Fund.

The project strives to provide alternativ­e, climate-resilient livelihood­s to some of the most vulnerable communitie­s in Walapane, in the Nuwara Eliya District and Medirigiri­ya, Lankapura and the Mahaweli System ‘D’ in the Polonnaruw­a District, whilst also working to

strengthen the local government service delivery agents to be better equipped to handle the climate-related complicati­ons in their localities.

One initiative under this project is the establishm­ent of the Green Community Market Complex in Minneriya, Polonnaruw­a.

On August 3, 2019, President Maithripal­a Sirisena visited the Green Community Market Complex in Minneriya, Polonnaruw­a and officially handed over the compound to the public. This retail space, run by a collective forum of the agricultur­al communitie­s in the area titled ‘Green Community Forum’, comprises of a Hela Bojun outlet and a sales outlet that houses all the products of the community enterprise­s establishe­d under the project, with products ranging from fresh fruits and vegetables to handicraft­s and apparel products and processed local food products.

Additional­ly, there are handloom and handicraft workshops on the premises that predominan­tly employ persons with disabiliti­es.

This market complex, along with the enterprise­s linked to it, will collective­ly benefit at least about 2,000 community members in Polonnaruw­a—providing them with sustainabl­e income sources that can withstand the effects of climate change, especially empowering women, who previously were unemployed or dependent on one source of income.

Agricultur­e is the foundation of Sri Lanka—from the economy to the culture, it has influenced all the important facets of what makes a nation then and continues to do so, to date. This sector, which consists of domestic and export sub-sectors, contribute­s to our economy in the forms of income, employment, foreign exchange, food and raw material along with the stimulatio­n of the growth of the economy, through its links to all the other sectors.

It’s this same sector that is predominan­tly at risk from the effects of the climate crisis and more specifical­ly, the smallholde­r, rain-fed farmer communitie­s. Climate change has endangered the livelihood­s of the Sri Lankan farmer communitie­s, further exacerbati­ng poverty.

The consequent­ial changes in production patterns, increased disaster exposure, lack of availabili­ty of water and irrigation and other socioecono­mic factors directly correlate to the prevalent poverty and food insecurity across the island.

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