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Revision as of 08:46, 17 September 2018

General

Name of initiative Adaptation for Small holder Agriculture Programme (ASAP)
LPAA initiative Yes
NAZCA Initiative Yes
Website address https://www.ifad.org/web/guest/asap
Related initiatives
Starting year 2012
End year
Secretariat International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), Via Paolo di Dono 44, 00142 Rome, Italy, Tel: +39 06 5459 2282, e-mail: b.thomson@ifad.org
Organisational structure ASAP is a trust fund managed by IFAD

Climate finance allocations are integrated with IFAD’s country based allocations (loans and grants) Projects are submitted to IFAD Executive Board for approval Supervision and implementation support to projects is provided in line with established IFAD procedures. https://www.ifad.org/topic/asap/overview

Geographical coverage Global
Name of lead organisation International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD),
Type of lead organisation International organisation
Location/Nationality of lead organisation Italy

Description

Description Smallholder Agriculture Programme (ASAP) channels climate finance to smallholder farmers so they can access the information tools and technologies that help build their resilience to climate change.
Objectives The objective of ASAP is to improve the climate resilience of large-scale rural development programmes and improve the capacity of at least 8 million smallholder farmers to expand their options in a rapidly changing environment.
Activities
One or two success stories achieved Bolivia: Potatoes in Peril

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LrRPzzvgiQ

Viet Nam: Adapting in the Delta https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJNedYDrys0

Monitoring and Impacts

Function of initiative Funding, Implementation
Activity of initiative Financing, Technical operational implementation (ex-post)
Indicators
Goals As per April 2016, financing for 35 ASAP-supported investment programmes is committed. By late December 2016, the objective is to reach 47 projects in line with IFAD programming cycle and covering 5 continents.

We are foreseeing to present our achievement at LPAA special event during COP22 such as the one which was successfully organized at COP21. We are foreseeing top level representation from IFAD. We can present achievement in terms of financial resources, in terms of concrete examples of successful investments at the field level, in terms of concrete achievements of national institutional processes (e.g. building codes).

With resources mobilized till COP21, ASAP aims at increasing the climate resilience and food security of 8 million smallholders by 2020. With additional support of US$ 300 million, IFAD would be able to reach an additional 15 million smallholders by 2025. Since 2015, IFAD has already received US$ 92 million additional pledges to increase climate resilience ofsmallholders in the context of IFAD10 replenishment.

The ASAP programme and the 100% mainstreaming target for IFAD 10 are the tools to achieve delivery to our beneficiary smallholders. Climate mainstreaming activities are now progressively fully blended into the regular IFAD programming cycle.

Comments on indicators and goals
How will goals be achieved
Have you changed or strenghtened your goals
Progress towards the goals As per April 2016, financial support amounting to US$ 285 million has allowed for integrating the following targets into the logical framework of 35 ASAP-supported investment programmes (+ 7 projects since COP21) to build climate resilience of poor smallholders:

• 6 million household members whose climate resilience has been increased (+ 500,000 beneficiaries since COP21) • 1.7 million hectares of land (+150,000 ha since COP21) and 15 watersheds managed under climate resilient practices • 99 thousand households and 2.6 thousand production and processing facilities with increased water availability (+ 27 facilities since COP21) • 600 thousand individuals (+ 20,000 individuals since COP21) and 9 thousand community groups engaged in climate risk management, ENRM or DRR activities • US$ 54 million worth of new or existing rural infrastructure and 827 kilometres of rural roads made climate resilient (+202 km since COP21) • 51 dialogues international and country dialogues on climate issues where ASAP supported projects or project partners make an active contribution (+ 2 dialogues since COP21) Since January 2016, IFAD 10th cycle is on-going and aims to achieve 100% climate resilience of its annual investments by 2018.

New and additional financial support has allowed for supporting 35 ASAP investment programmes to build climate resilience of poor smallholders: • 6 million household members whose climate resilience has been increased ; • 1.7 million hectares of land and 15 watersheds managed under climate resilient practices; • 99 thousand households and 2.6 thousand production and processing facilities with increased water availability ; • 600 thousand individuals and 9 thousand community groups engaged in climate risk management, ENRM or DRR activities • US$ 54 million worth of new or existing rural infrastructure and 827 kilometres of rural roads made climate resilient • 51 dialogues international and country dialogues on climate issues where ASAP supported projects or project partners make an active contribution 30 MtCO2eq. avoided: https://www.ifad.org/documents/10180/3610585/mitigation_advantage.pdf/06ea9d33-c848-417f-8a35-f9823deccdb5 Funds disbursed: As per April 2016, financial support amounting to US$ 285 million has been deployed in partner countries for adaptation investments.

How are you tracking progress of your initiative Progress is tracked by the corporate IFAD’s Results and Impact Management System (RIMS) with specific climate markers/indicators.
Available reporting Progress is tracked by the corporate IFAD’s Results and Impact Management System (RIMS) with specific climate markers/indicators. Results and impacts are disclosed annually in the Report on IFAD's Development Effectiveness (RIDE).

The Mitigation Advantage Report shows the CO2 reduction potential: https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/mitigation_advantage.pdf

Participants

Participants Number Names
Members 53  
Companies 0
Business organisations 5
Research and educational organisations 0
Non-governmental organisations 6 CGIAR Research Programme on climate Change,  Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS),  Adaptation Learning Mechanism,  Climate & Development Knowledge Network (CDKN),  World Agroforestry Center
National states 0
Governmental actors 42 Benin,  Bhutan,  Bolivia,  Burundi,  Cape Verde,  Cambodia,  Chad,  Comoros,  Ivory Coast,  Djibouti,  Ecuador,  Egypt,  El Salvador,  Ethiopia,  Gambia,  Ghana,  Kenya,  Kyrgyzstan,  Laos,  Lesotho,  Liberia,  Madagascar,  Malawi,  Mali,  Mauritania,  Moldova,  Morocco,  Mozambique,  Myanmar,  Nepal,  Nicaragua,  Niger,  Nigeria,  Paraguay,  Rwanda,  Sudan,  Tajikistan,  Tanzania,  Uganda,  Vietnam
Regional / state / county actors 0
City / municipal actors 0
Intergovernmental organisations 0
Financial Institutions 0
Faith based organisations 0
Other members 0
Supporting partners 10 Belgium,  Canada,  Finland,  Netherlands,  Norway,  Sweden,  Switzerland,  South Korea,  United Kingdom,  and Flanders.
Number of members in the years
2018
53
Have only national states as participators No


Theme

Transport Agriculture Forestry Business Financial institutions Buildings Industry Waste Cities and subnational governments Short Term Pollutants International maritime transport Energy Supply Fluorinated gases Energy efficiency Renewable energy Supply chain emission reductions Adaptation Other Resilience Innovation Energy Access and Efficiency Private Finance
No Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No No No Yes No Yes No No No
Last update: 25 July 2022 08:37:54

Not only have national states as participators