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Mozambique: Project Highlights - OSRO/MOZ/142/GER











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    Mozambique: Project Highlights - OSRO/MOZ/139/JPN 2025
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    The Government of Japan contributed USD 960 000 to the FAO project, "Urgent agricultural livelihood support for vulnerable returnees in Cabo Delgado", which was implemented from the 31 March 2024 to 30 March 2025. The project aimed to rebuild and restore agriculture-based livelihoods and improve internally displaced households' food security and nutrition in CaboDelgado.
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    Mozambique: Project Highlights - OSRO/MOZ/135/GER 2024
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    The Government of the Federal Republic of Germany contributed USD 500 000 to the FAO project, "Anticipating the impacts of El Niño-induced drought to protect smallholder farmers’ livelihoods in Mozambique", which was implemented from 1 September 2023 to 31 March 2024. The project aimed to reduce the negative impact of El Niño-induced drought on vulnerable households by strengthening their resilience and increasing food security.
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    Global: Project Highlights - OSRO/GLO/1233/GER (Phase 2 of OSRO/GLO/1196/GER) 2025
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    The German Federal Foreign Office, through the Special Fund for Emergency and Rehabilitation Activities − Anticipatory Action window, contributed EUR 3million (USD 3 260 885) to the project, "Scaling-up anticipatory action to protect agricultural livelihoods and food security: Phase 2" which was implemented from 1 January 2024 to 31 December 2024. The project aimed to safeguard the agriculture-based livelihoods and food security of the most vulnerable populations ahead of shocks, and to reduce humanitarian needs by systematically linking risk analysis to anticipatory action in high-risk countries.

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    Developing policies to foster inclusive rural transformation processes requires better evidence on how climate change is affecting the livelihoods and economic behaviours of vulnerable rural people, including women, youths and people living in poverty. In particular, there is little comparative, multi-country and multi-region evidence to understand how exposure to weather shocks and climate change affects the drivers of rural transformation and adaptive actions across different segments of rural societies and in different agro-ecological contexts. This evidence is essential because, while climate risk and adaptive actions are context specific and require local solutions, global evidence is important for identifying shared vulnerabilities and priority actions for scaling up effective responses. This report assembles an impressive set of data from 24 low- and middle-income countries in five world regions to measure the effects of climate change on rural women, youths and people living in poverty. It analyses socioeconomic data collected from 109 341 rural households (representing over 950 million rural people) in these 24 countries. These data are combined in both space and time with 70 years of georeferenced data on daily precipitation and temperatures. The data enable us to disentangle how different types of climate stressors affect people’s on-farm, off-farm and total incomes, labour allocations and adaptive actions, depending on their wealth, gender and age characteristics.
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    The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2024
    Financing to end hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms
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    Six years from 2030, hunger and food insecurity trends are not yet moving in the right direction to end hunger and food insecurity (SDG Target 2.1) by 2030. The indicators of progress towards global nutrition targets similarly show that the world is not on track to eliminate all forms of malnutrition (SDG Target 2.2). Billions of people still lack access to nutritious, safe and sufficient food. Nevertheless, progress in many countries provides hope of the possibility of getting back on track towards hunger and malnutrition eradication. Implementing the policies, investments and legislation needed to revert the current trends of hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition requires proper financing for food security and nutrition. Despite a broad agreement on the urgent need to increase financing for food security and nutrition, the same cannot be said for a common understanding regarding how this financing should be defined and tracked. The report provides a long-awaited definition of financing for food security and nutrition and guidance for its implementation. There are recommendations regarding the efficient use of innovative financing tools and reforms to the food security and nutrition financing architecture. Establishing a common definition of financing for food security and nutrition, and methods for its tracking, measurement and implementation, is an important first step towards sustainably increasing the financing flows needed to end hunger, food insecurity and all forms of malnutrition, and to ensure access to healthy diets for all, today and tomorrow.