2022 progress
The IFRC’s report of its 2021
Global Climate
Action and Environmental Sustainability Survey
was published in March 2022, and the findings
demonstrated the depth and breadth of National
Society action around the world.
The priorities revealed by the survey include
scaling up climate-smart disaster risk reduction,
preparedness, and anticipatory/early action, fol-
lowed by reducing the health impacts of climate
change. National Societies indicated that they
need increased knowledge and capacity, as well
as
increased access to funding, to enable them
to reach more people in need with the services
they need to keep themselves safe now and
in the future.
In support of Red Cross and Red Crescent work
in
anticipatory action, the IFRC’s Operational
Framework for scaling up Anticipatory Action
2021–2025 was approved and disseminated
widely across the network.
In 2022, IFRC became the lead of the
Early
Warnings for All Initiative
Pillar 4 on prepar-
edness and response, focusing on action at
community level, and supporting Pillar 3
on risk
communication and community engagement.
Support for nature-based solutions – actions
to protect, sustainably manage or restore an
ecosystem that can protect against disaster
and climate risks - was solidified with the launch
of
The Nature Navigator
, a guide for National
Societies who wish to implement nature-based
solutions in their work.
Nature-based solutions can include protecting
and restoring forests, the protection of man-
groves and coral reefs, the conservation and
restoration of wetlands, or the creation of urban
greenspaces.
In 2022, the IFRC continued to oversee and
support the implementation of the global
USAID nature-based
solutions project in
Jamaica, Vietnam and the Philippines. Activities
included enhanced vulnerability and capacity
assessments in nine communities (three in each
country) alongside ecological assessments. At
the global level, capacity was built through train-
ing of trainers for the Philippines and Vietnam,
and through regional training in Kenya with
some 20 National Societies.
Also during the course of the year, the IFRC
started
a small project funded by UNEP, to
mainstream Ecosystem-based Disaster Risk
Reduction in four Caribbean countries: Jamaica,
Belize, Grenada and Trinidad and Tobago.
In May 2022, the IFRC and World Wildlife Fund
(WWF) launched a partnership that included
a strong focus on nature-based solutions. A
joint IFRC-WWF report, “
Working
with Nature
to Protect People
”, was published the following
month to high media attention.
The IFRC worked with the Zurich Flood Resilience
Alliance to develop a climate resilience meas-
urement for communities tool in 2022, which
complements the existing flood resilience meas-
urement tool. The Alliance and IFRC supported
National Societies in the Philippines, Mexico,
Albania, Montenegro and Mozambique to imple-
ment holistic flood resilience programmes that
included community resilience building, advo-
cacy and knowledge management actions.
The Zurich Flood Resilience
Alliance also col-
laborated with the IFRC and the Red Cross Red
Crescent Climate Centre in 2022 to develop a
new e-learning course titled Red Alert: what is
climate change and what can we do about it.
As part of the IFRC’s ambitious Global Climate
Resilience Platform (see Spotlight), the IFRC
worked with the American Red Cross and the
Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre to cre-
ate the Coastal City Resilience and Heat Project,
which was approved by USAID BHA. The project,
worth USD 10 million over five years, focuses on
action in nine cities in Honduras, Bangladesh,
Indonesia and Tanzania. It will scale-up locally
led adaptation
and transform humanitarian
responses to climate change, build coastal city
resilience, and address extreme heat.
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