Climate Resilience for Critical Sites for Migratory Birds and People along the East Atlantic Flyway
The East Atlantic Flyway is a migratory route used by millions of waterbirds. It connects breeding areas in the Arctic and sub-Arctic with staging and non-breeding sites along the western coast of Europe and Afri-ca all the way to South Africa. Along the flyway there is often conflict between the needs of birds and people and the ways resources are managed, as people also rely on the ecosystem services provided by this network of critical coastal sites. Climate change will further accentuate this conflict in the absence of effective mechanisms that incorporate biodiversity, ecosystem services and people into climate adapta-tion responses at landscape scale. Lasting co-existence between people and biodiversity requires effec-tive, large scale and coordinated planning and management. This programme identifes existing and potential climate change driven threats, demonstrates (nature based) solutions and builds capacity for their implementation - for the benefits of both birds and people.
- Countries
- Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania, Senegal
- IKI funding
- 335,122.58 €
- Duration
- 05/2023 till 12/2023
- Status
- completed
- Implementing organisation
- Common Wadden Sea Secretariat
- Political Partner
-
- Ministry for Environment and Sustainable Development (MEDD) - Mauretania
- Ministry for Environment and Sustainable Development (MEDD) - Senegal
- Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Guinea-Bissau - Guinée-Bissau
- Ramsar Convention on Wetlands Secretariat - Switzerland
- Implementing Partner
-
- Banc d'Arguin National Park (PNBA) - Mauritania
- BirdLife International - Global Office - United Kingdom
- Global Flyway Network (GFN) - Netherlands
- Institute of Biodiversity and Protected Areas (IBAP) - Guinea-Bissau
- Regional Partnership for Marine and Coastal Conservation (PRCM) - Senegal
- Wetlands International (WI) - Netherlands*
State of implementation/results
- The preparation phase of the project includes the following topics :
- refine project activities in close collaboration with the partner countries, to ensure that the planned activities in the main project phase are directly related to local conditions, are sustainable and contribute to the establishment of a climate change resilient flyway.
- In West Africa site-level workshops are planned to inform local communities about the scope of the project and obtain feedback on planned activities.
- National workshops will bring together experts and political partners to discuss the planned activities and create synergies with existing initiatives, including multilateral environmental agreements, to ensure our project contributes to their missions.
- Through the involvement of relevant stakeholders in the development of the project the goal is to achieve longterm success.
- After the preparation phase , a decision is made on further funding by the International Climate Initiative.
Latest Update:
12/2025
Project relations
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