Two Indian Projects among FAO-led projects to make agriculture resilient and sustainable in support of 1 million people
The Global Environment Facility (GEF) has approved eight projects led by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) worth nearly $60 million designed to help seven countries improve their management of agricultural landscapes, promote climate-friendly and biodiversity-positive livestock production, and restore forest, coastal, and marine ecosystems.
The projects will leverage approximately $429 million in co-financing and will improve the management of 305,000 hectares of protected areas on land and sea. They will also restore 314,000 hectares of landscapes, improve the management of 1.2 million hectares of productive land, and mitigate 84.5 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions, benefitting over 1 million people across four continents.
Projetcts approved for India:
- $9.9 million project in India to improve integrated landscape management across 2.9 million hectares of protected areas, forests, and productive landscapes in Central India, home to half of India’s tiger’s reserves.
- $8.8 million project in India to reduce land degradation and enhance the climate and livelihood resilience of smallholder livestock keepers through landscape restoration, sustainable land management, and greening dairy value chains.
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