Persons in charge: | Kindu, M.; Knoke, T. |
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Funded by: | European Commission |
Cooperation partners: | ZABALA Brussels, Belgium Accademia Europea di Bolzano (EURAC), Italy Environment Europe Foundation, The Netherlands Kwame Nkruma University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Ghana West African Science Services Centre on Climate Change (WASCAL), Ghana Pan African University Institute of Water and Energy Sciences (PAUWES), Algeria World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), Kenya National Research Institute for Agricultural Engineering, Water, and Forestry (INRGREF), Tunisia Cheikh Anta Diop University of Dakar (UCAD), Senegal Rural Polytechnic Institute for Training and Applied Research) (IPR-IFRA), Mali University of Pala (UPALA), Chad University of El Manar (UEM), Tunisia National Agency of the Great Green Wall (GGW) (GGW Country Office), Chad Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development (GGW Country Office), Djibouti Senegalese Agency for Reforestation and the GGW (GGW Country Office), Senegal |
TRANS-SAHARA
Novel WEFE Nexus-based approaches towards agroforestry management in the Greater North African Region
TRANS-SAHARA will establish a groundbreaking approach for leveraging agroforestry systems to support African communities in their fight against climate change. This innovative approach is based on the well-established Water-Energy-Food-Ecosystems (WEFE) Nexus approach, which emphasizes the primacy of ensuring water security when designing, installing and managing agroforestry systems. The translation of this conceptual agroforestry management approach into real-world applications is supported by an array of technical and non-technical innovations. These include cutting-edge measurement methods and tools to accurately assess environmental and socio-economic impacts, scalable nature-based intervention strategies to facilitate sustainable exploitation of natural resources, and novel business models designed to secure long-term livelihoods of local communities engaged in agroforestry practices. The efficacy of the novel approach and supporting innovations will be rigorously tested and validated through a series of large-scale pilot demonstrations set to take place in key locations across Africa, including Tunisia, Ghana, and Ethiopia. Novel community-led engagement methods are used to support the co-design of the demonstrators, and ensure deep acceptance of the innovation within local communities. Expected outcomes will contribute to bridging the agroforestry data gaps in Africa, increased crop yield, doubling of farmers’ annual incomes, and creation of new carbon sinks across previously degraded territories. An ambitious post-project exploitation plan executed in partnership with EU and African policymakers and civil society groups foresees the immediate and widespread uptake of resulting innovations across African Union (AU) member countries and beyond by 2030. Innovation adopters will significantly enhance their communities’ resilience to threats posed by the climate emergency, and stimulate highly sustainable socio-economic development across their region. A multidisciplinary team of 21 universities and institutes across Europe and Africa are part of this research project