DTiNews
  1. VIETNAM TODAY

  2. Society

GCF provides additional US$30 million fund to help nation adapt to climate change

The Green Climate Fund has provided an additional US$30 million as non-refundable assistance to help regions in the southcentral and Central Highlands of the country deal with the negative impact of climate change.

The Green Climate Fund (GCF) provided an additional US$30 million as non-refundable assistance on October 15 to help regions in the southcentral and Central Highlands of the country deal with the negative impact of climate change.


GCF provides additional US$30 million fund to help nation adapt to climate change - 1


Delegates participate in the ceremony to kick off the project (Photo: sggp.org.vn)


The funding is being channeled through the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, with the aim to build roughly 1,200 ponds in order to adapt to climate change in the southcentral and Central Highlands regions.

Moving forward, the project is anticipated to benefit local resident across five provinces, including Dak Lak, Dak Nong, Khanh Hoa, Ninh Thuan, and Binh Thuan.

Upon addressing the ceremony to kick off the project, Terence D. Jones, resident representative of the UNDP in Vietnam, emphasized that the UNDP has also recently deployed the GCF-funded US$30 million project to help 28 coastal Vietnamese provinces deal with climate change.

As a means of solving the shortage of water, the new project will strive to support small farming households in a bid to strengthen their resilience to effectively cope with drought.

Simultaneously, farmers who make use of rainwater for cultivation will also benefit from the upgrading and building of 1,159 new ponds that have been specifically designed to adapt to climate change.
Source: VOV
More news
Cold snap leaves Hanoi shivering

Cold snap leaves Hanoi shivering

Hanoi’s temperature fell to as low as 9 degrees Celsius as a fresh cold front swept across the city, with workers lighting small fires on pavements...
Loading...