Skip to main content
Home

GEF Logo

GEF Logo

Search
  • Who We Are

    Organization

    • Overview
    • CEO and Chairperson
    • Focal Points
    • Secretariat Staff

    GEF Council

    • Members & Alternates
    • Work Programs
    • Meetings
    • Decisions

    Funding

    • Overview
    • GEF-8 Replenishment
    • GEF-7 Replenishment
    • Replenishment Documents
    • Overview
    • CEO and Chairperson
    • Focal Points
    • Secretariat Staff
  • What We Do

    Topics

    Topics

    • Amazon
    • Biodiversity
    • Blended Finance
    • Chemicals and Waste
    • Climate Change
    • Climate Change Adaptation
    • Climate Change Mitigation
    • Food Security
    • Forests
    • Illegal Wildlife Trade
    • International Waters
    • Land Degradation
    • Least Developed Countries Fund
    • Mercury
    • Special Climate Change Fund
    • Sustainable Cities
    • View All Topics >>

    Stakeholder Engagement

    Stakeholder Engagement

    • Civil Society Organizations
    • Country Support Program
    • Gender
    • Indigenous Peoples
    • Knowledge & Learning
    • Private Sector
  • Projects & Operations

    Projects

    Projects

    • Project Database
    • Templates
    • How Projects Work

    Countries

    Countries

    • Recipient Countries
    • Donor Countries
    • Participant Countries
    • Country Support Program

    Operations

    Operations

    • Conflict Resolution Commissioner
    • Knowledge & Learning
    • Policies and Guidelines
    • Results
  • Partners

    Partners

    • Countries
    • GEF Agencies
    • Conventions
    • Civil Society Organizations
    • Private Sector
    • Countries
    • GEF Agencies
    • Conventions
    • Civil Society Organizations
    • Private Sector
  • Newsroom

    Newsroom Menu Column 1

    • All
    • News
    • Feature Stories
    • Press Releases
    • Multimedia
    • Publications
    • Blog

    Newsroom Menu Column 2

    • GEF Logo
    • Partner News
    • Newsletter
    • Media Contacts
    • All
    • News
    • Feature Stories
    • Press Releases
    • Multimedia
    • Publications
    • Blog
  • Events
  • Search

Helping Save Samoa’s Forests UNDP Administrator and GEF CEO meet a community on the frontline

News
September 3, 2014
Naoko_SIDS_Banner_5.jpg
Naoko_SIDS_Banner_5.jpg

The referenced media source is missing and needs to be re-embedded.
UNDP%20logo%20sml.png
UNDP%20logo%20sml.png

With Samoa’s forests under increasing threat from climate change, unsustainable land use practices and the advance of invasive species, the government is working with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and 26 communities across the country to save three critical forest areas.

“Perhaps nowhere else on Earth are people’s lives, livelihoods, and economies more reliant on a healthy environment than they are in the Small Island Developing States,” said UNDP Administrator, Helen Clark.

In a break from the Third International Small Island Developing States conference being held in Apia, Helen Clark the UNDP Administrator and Naoko Ishii the GEF Chief Executive Officer today met with people of Luatuanu’u. This is one of the 26 communities participating in the Integration of Climate Change Risks and Resilience into Forestry Management in Samoa (ICCRIFS) project.

 

SIDS%20Naoko_0.jpg
SIDS%20Naoko_0.jpg

Naoko Ishii (left) and Helen Clark (right)

“This project is an excellent example of how the GEF and UNDP are supporting communities from Ridge to Reef with an integrated, holistic approach. It demonstrates how local communities can serve as catalysts for effective action in the face of increasing threats from climate change that help sustain livelihoods and build resilience" said Naoko Ishii, GEF CEO and Chairperson.

A key element of the Forestry Project’s success has been engaging 16,700 people in the management of their local forestry areas. In each participating village, leaders, men, women and children used simple materials like cardboard and paper Mache to create a three dimensional model of their area. For many, this was the first time they had seen a bird’s eye view of how the watersheds, agricultural lands and the entire ecosystem of where they live are interlinked.  

In Luatuanu’u today, local leaders took Miss Clark and Ms Ishii through the model their community had created several months ago and explained how it is now used to make local forestry management decisions.      

“Engaging local people in sustainably managing the water, arable land and all the resources upon which they rely, from the ridge to the reef, is critical,” said Miss Clark.   

Models like these also provide the Samoan government with valuable local knowledge to use in national forestry management plans.

This effort to save Samoa’s forests also involves replanting native species grown in community nurseries, guarding against forest fires, and working with communities to improve the productivity of their low-land agricultural lands, so there is less need to encroach into upland forests.

Miss Clark and Ms Ishii today saw the native tree nursery and an agro-forestry demonstration plot in Luatuanu’u, where, together with the Samoan Farmers Association, local people are growing a more diverse range of fruits and vegetables than they did in the past.

Launched in 2011, the Project aims to revitalize Samoa’s forests. This is a key priority under the governments’ national plan to adapt to climate change. Healthier forests reduce the prevalence of such risks as landslides, flood and poor water supply.  As climate change threatens to produce more powerful weather events, stronger forests in Samoa will help protect communities against cyclones and other natural disasters.

The project is financed by a grant from the Global Environment Facility through the Least Developed Country Fund (LDCF) plus co-financing by the Government of Samoa and implemented by UNDP.

 ###

About the GEF

The Global Environment Facility is a partnership for international cooperation where 183 countries work together with international institutions, civil society organizations and the private sector, to address global environmental issues. The GEF serves as financial mechanism for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants and the Minamata Convention on Mercury. It also works closely with the Montreal Protocol on Ozone Depleting Substances.

Since 1991, the GEF has provided $12.5 billion in grants and leveraged $58 billion in co-financing for 3,690 projects in 165 developing countries. For 23 years, developed and developing countries alike have provided these funds to support activities related to biodiversity, climate change, international waters, land degradation, and chemicals and waste in the context of development projects and programs.  Through its Small Grants Programme (SGP) the GEF has made more than 20,000 grants to civil society and community based organizations for a total of $1 billion.

Among the major results of these investments, the GEF has set up protected areas around the world equal roughly to the area of Brazil; reduced carbon emissions by 2.3 billion tonnes; eliminated the use of ozone depleting substances in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia; transformed the management of 33 major river basins and one-third of the world’s large marine ecosystems; slowed the advance of desertification in Africa by improving agricultural practices—and all this while contributing to better the livelihood and food security of millions of people.

Stay Connected

  • www.facebook.com/thegef1
  • www.twitter.com/theGEF
  • www.youtube.com/GEFSecretariat
  • www.flickr.com/theGEF
  • www.thegef.org/gef/gefrss 
  • www.issuu.com/thegef
  • www.linkedin.com/company/global-environment-facility 


###

Media Contacts

For UNDP

In Apia, Samoa: Lisa Garvey - lisa.garvey@undp.org; + 685 7726033

In New York, USA: Dylan Lowthian - dylan.lowthian@undp.org + 1 212 906 5516

For the GEF

In Washington, DC, USA: Christian Hofer - chofer@thegef.org+1 202 413 4185

Topics

Forests
Sustainable Forest Management

Countries

Samoa

Related News

Large forested mountainous area in Guinea
Feature Story

How the GEF is driving up global investment in forests

February 28, 2023
Image
Cover image for publication "Innovative Finance for Nature and People"
Publication

Innovative Finance for Nature and People

Cattle standing in deforested area, Brazil
Feature Story

Forest-friendly farming and supply chains gain momentum

December 7, 2022

GEF Updates

Subscribe to our distribution list to receive the GEF Newsletter.

Sign up

GEF Logo

Follow Us

GEF Affiliated Sites

  • GEF Portal
  • Independent Evaluation Office
  • Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel
  • Small Grants Programme

Who We Are

  • GEF Secretariat Staff
  • Conflict Resolution Commissioner
  • Council Members & Alternates
  • Focal Points
  • Careers
  • Legal
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Global Environment Facility, All Rights Reserved.  |   Legal