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AfDB Raise Climate Disaster Risk Financing In Malawi With $9.25m Grants


(AFRICAN EXAMINER) – African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved two grants of $9.25 million to implement the Africa Disaster Risk Financing Programme (ADRiFi) in Malawi.

The move will boost the country’s resilience against climate-related shocks and food insecurity. The funding will support the government of Malawi to develop climate risk management solutions and pay its sovereign risk premium for the transfer of drought risks under the ADRiFi programme.

The programme enhances African countries’ ability to evaluate climate-related risks and costs, respond to climate-related disasters and review adaptation measures. The initiative also provides initial financing for countries in need of support.

The Bank manages the ADRiFi Multi-Donor Trust Fund with contributions from the United Kingdom and Switzerland. The fund, together with the African Development Fund, makes resources available to support the payment of premiums by African countries to protect their exposed vulnerable populations, increase the number of participants in the risk pool and make the African Risk Capacity an effective pan-African initiative.

The initiative, a partnership between the AfDB and African Risk Capacity Group (ARC), enhances preparedness and strengthens countries’ financial resilience against climate hazards by supporting participation in ARC’s sovereign risk pool.

ARC is a specialized agency of the African Union that helps African governments improve capacity to better plan, prepare, and respond to extreme weather events and natural disasters

ADRiFi’s presence in Malawi will help shield the country’s smallholder farming communities, including women and children, particularly from the worst impacts of drought.

It will also safeguard investments and development gains in Malawi related to five Bank agricultural projects, including to rebuild infrastructure damaged when disaster strikes. Grant funds will also go to build the capacity of national agencies that manage disaster risk.

Rollout of the disaster risk initiative aligns with the country’s 2019-2024 Disaster Risk Financing Strategy, which identifies insurance as a tool to address the risks of climate disasters. It also advances Malawi’s Vision 2063, which aims to promote a transformative agriculture sector that is smart and resilient to climate change.

The first grant, worth $4.9 million, will come from the African Development Fund (ADF) The ADRiFi Multi-Donor Trust Fund will provide financing for the second grant valued at $4.35 million. The grants will support the first of two phases of the program, covering the 2022-2023 period. The government of Malawi and ARC will also contribute funding toward total costs of $10.13 million for Phase 1 of the programme.

the Bank’s Vice President for Agriculture, Human and Social Development, Dr. Beth Dunford said Africa is the world’s region most vulnerable to climate change-related weather extremes like flooding, droughts and tropical cyclones.

“We welcome Malawi into the Africa Disaster Risk Financing Programme, which boosts participating countries’ ability to respond rapidly to the aftermath of climate-related disasters, arrange finance before shocks and better serve their most vulnerable populations impacted by the effects of climate shocks”, he said.

Agriculture contributes about 30 percent of Malawi’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and employs about 64 percent of its workforce. The nation’s agriculture sector is primarily dependent on rainfall. However, rainfall patterns have grown more erratic and harder to predict due to climate variability, and climate-induced shocks are predicted to become more frequent and severe, especially in southern Africa.

Notably, this has increased the vulnerability of rural dwellers, including farmers, and the overall economy, to weather-related shocks.

Malawi is the 9th country to join the ADRiFi programme. The other participants are Gambia, Mauritania, Niger, Sudan, Madagascar, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Under the initiative, Madagascar, Mauritania and Niger have already received insurance payouts with a combined value of $17 million. The funds have been used for recovery efforts following drought and tropical cyclones.


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