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Poverty, Reforestation, Energy and Climate Change

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    Booklet
    Evaluation report
    Evaluation of the project “Poverty, Reforestation, Energy and Climate Change"
    Mid-term report, project code: GCP/PAR/020/GCF
    2024
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    This is the mid-term report of the evaluation of the project “Poverty, Reforestation, Energy, and Climate Change” (PROEZA), co-implemented by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and Paraguayan government institutions, and funded by the Green Climate Fund (GCF). The project’s main objective is to improve the resilience of poor and extreme poor households vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and to increase the forest cover in environmentally sensitive areas of Eastern Paraguay. This report presents an assessment of the project’s design and progress towards established objectives. The evaluation answers questions framed starting from the project’s theory of change. Methods involved desk reviews, field visits, interviews to FAO and non-FAO stakeholders, focus group discussions with beneficiaries and a comparative analysis of the emissions reduction calculation. Up to October 2023, PROEZA planted 700 hectares, involving 800 families and designed a regulatory proposal that would create a single window for forestry investment procedures. The evaluation framed four recommendations to ensure better execution, still low at 5 percent at the time of the evaluation. Recommendations entail addressing design deficiencies, strengthening leadership, establishing an exit strategy, and reviewing the Environmental and Social Management Framework.
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    Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
    Brochure
    FAO’s work on climate change: Leaving no one behind. Addressing climate change for a world free of poverty and hunger 2016
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    Poverty is one of the biggest obstacles to human development and economic growth. About 2.1 billion people still live in poverty and 900 million are extreme poor. Most of them live in rural areas and depend on agriculture and rural livelihoods for their income and food security.
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    Project
    Factsheet
    Planning National Land and Forest Action to Mitigate Climate Change and Reduce Poverty in Equatorial Guinea - UNJP/EQG/010/UNJ 2020
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    Equatorial Guinea has a forest cover estimated at 2.5 million hectares, representing more than 90 percent of the national surface area. Despite this extensive cover, the estimated rates of forest loss (deforestation plus forest degradation) show a worrying upward trend, particularly for forest degradation. In line with its international and regional commitments, in 2012 Equatorial Guinea started its national process of Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation, and the role of conservation, sustainable management and enhancement of forest carbon stocks (REDD+). This project significantly contributed to moving forward the national REDD+ progress, engaging multiple actors in the fight against climate change. In order to address the causes of deforestation and forest degradation, and promote sustainable development, Equatorial Guinea decided to develop a National REDD+ Investment Plan.

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    Newsletter
    Newsletter
    GIEWS Update – The Republic of Haiti, 4 June 2025
    Critical levels of acute food insecurity likely to worsen amid heightened insecurity
    2025
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    Food insecurity has been steadily worsening since 2018, with a record 5.7 million people estimated to be facing high levels of food insecurity between March and June 2025 and more than 8 400 individuals in displacement camps facing IPC Phase 5 (Catastrophe) level. Widespread gang violence is severely disrupting livelihoods and deteriorating food security by hindering agricultural production and impeding the transport of goods and access to markets. The decline in national cereal production is expected to continue in 2025, further reducing local food supplies, keeping food prices high and undermining agricultural livelihoods.
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    Evaluation report
    Evaluación final del proyecto “Fortalecimiento de la gestión ambientalmente adecuada de plaguicidas incluyendo Contaminantes Orgánicos Persistentes”
    Codigo de proyecto: GCP/URU/031/GFF, FMAM: 5144
    2024
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    El proyecto, iniciado en enero de 2016 y extendido hasta diciembre de 2023, tuvo como objetivo eliminar las existencias de plaguicidas obsoletos incluidos los Contaminantes Orgánicos Persistentes y sus envases, y fortalecer la gestión del ciclo de vida de los plaguicidas en Uruguay. Los resultados de la evaluación indican que el proyecto inicio un proceso prioritario para conjuntar los enfoques productivo, ambiental y de salud con relación al fortalecimiento de la gestión de los plaguicidas. Se ha progresado hacia la reducción del riesgo a la salud humana y al ambiente gracias a los avances en la implementación del Plan de gestión de existencias obsoletas. Además, se encuentra que el proyecto ha logrado fortalecer la gestión de los envases vacíos, identificar estrategias efectivas de manejo integrado de plagas y alternativas a plaguicidas peligrosos, y fortalecer de manera importante las capacidades para el monitoreo de plaguicidas. Las recomendaciones se enfocan en el cumplimiento del plan de trabajo y el seguimiento a la propuesta de eliminación, y a la actualización y fortalecimiento del marco regulatorio.