Gulf News

CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT Farmers in Colombia adopt nature-based solutions

-

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 Reuters.

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 killed about 300 people and displaced 2.2 million more. Hardest-hit were poor farming communitie­s in La Mojana, a region stretching across four northern provinces.

Drought prone

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 (Dh29.37 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.

“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.

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.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates