Figure 1: USAID Bureau for Humanitarian is working with the World Food Programme to change the loves of rural communities in Malawo through a range of environmental and development interventions. Since 2017, farmers in the Usi village, have planted more than 1,800 trees.
Figure 2: Kamala Magar, a farmer from the disadvantage indigenous magar ethic group in Nepal, is a user of the Saripakha multiple use water system. The system provides pipe water from a spring source of 20 families for domestic use and vegetation production.
Figure 3: The hydro Floating Solar Hybrid Can produce electricity around 5 megawatts and is located at Srinakarin Dam.
Figure 4: In Djetkoram village, Catholic relief Service is disturbing cash as part of a Cash for Work project, which is helping people from the local community as well as those who have recently been displaced by Boko Haram violence in Niger.
Figure 5: Las Terreenas, Dominican Republic , September 1, 2018. The image describes the educational activities for development of capacities in adaptation strategies and flood protection.
Figure 6: Planting trees in the Cano Seco neighbourhood, in Las Terrenas, is a measure of risk reduction in the face of indebtedness.
Figure 7: Across Liberia, people rely on the county’s lush forest. They clear trees to grow rice and other crops, slowly destroying the remains of the Upper Guinean forest. Through a programme called WORTH, communities are developing new, reliable livelihoods that don’t harm forest.
Figure 8: Fishermen in Bahia Solano learnt how to improve their livelihood while mitigating over fishing through Emprende Pacifico, an initiative implemented by ACDDI/VOCA and the Ministry of Labour in 2016.
Figure 9: Illegal alluvial gold mining in Columbia is a complex phenomenon that not only sweeps away vegetation but alters the balance of ecosystems through aggressive mechanical extraction methods. To mitigate environmental impact of uncontrolled mineral exploitation, 1,133,220 acacia mangium trees and other native species were planted.
Figure 10: The members of a local Disaster and Risk Management committee in Belamboa bas Village, planted cactus seedlings. This region was hit by a chronic drought that caused severe food insecurity among the community and cattle.