Tanzania: Establishing a voluntary carbon market to restore mangroves and support local communities
By Climate Champions | December 7, 2022
Location & Region: Dar-Es-Salaam, Tanzania / Africa
Partner: Ocean Risk and Resilience Action Alliance (ORRAA)
Implementers: AquaFarms Organization (AFO) with the financial support from the Government of Canada. Direct financial support provided by the UK’s Blue Planet Fund.
Area and sector: Coastal/ Finance, Carbon markets, capacity building, restoration
ORRAA is working with Tanzanian NGO AquaFarms Organization (AFO) to enhance the resilience of coastal communities around Dar-es-Salaam, by establishing new sustainable sources of income from the rehabilitation of mangrove forests. The community-led solution is shifting behaviours from destruction to conservation, with a voluntary carbon market and beekeeping, which generates funds to be invested directly back into local facilities. ORRAA supports AFO as one of the winners of the first cycle of the Ocean Resilience Innovation Challenge.
Mangrove forests provide a host of ecosystem services and sequester five to 10 times more carbon than terrestrial forests. Yet, mangroves are amongst the most threatened habitats on earth, with climate change and human activities driving their destruction. It is estimated that a fifth of mangrove forests were lost globally between 1980 and 2005. This has had devastating consequences for the communities which depend on them for wellbeing and protection.
In Tanzania, mangroves are routinely cut down for firewood, medicinal purposes, and construction materials, or they are trampled to access floodplains used for fishing and to create rice fields. Despite government action and voluntary efforts by communities to stop these practices over the last three decades, mangroves continue to be destroyed or damaged to meet these short-term needs.
Solution
To reverse this trend and create ways for people to benefit from mangrove conservation rather than their degradation, Aqua-Farms Organization (AFO), an NGO dedicated to supporting a sustainable blue economy, is working with the Mbweni and Kunduchi communities on the outskirts of Dar-es-Salaam to create a Voluntary Community Mangrove Carbon Credit (VCMCC) market. The project’s goal is to improve the communities’ resilience by generating long-term revenue from their local forests.
Early in the project, AFO worked with local women’s groups to provide training in replanting mangroves. The team used available academic research on the hydrology and soil of the area, as well as lessons learnt from previous local replantation initiatives, to help local women select the best species and plant them using techniques based on traditional ecological knowledge.
Since 2018, over 20,000 mangrove seedlings have been successfully replanted across five hectares of mangroves both at Mbweni and Kunduchi sites. In parallel, AFO is providing beehives, tools, and training to over 40 women in in these two communities, empowering them to earn an independent and sustainable alternative source of income through beekeeping, the sale of honey and derived products.
“When we started replanting mangroves here in 2013, we were doing it just for the love of our environment, without knowing what mangroves would do for us. But now I see blue carbon is much more important than we thought for the health of our planet. We hope that the establishment of this project will create an ecosystem where communities live in harmony with nature.” — Bernard Kaitira, Community Representative at Kunduchi.
Scalability and Next Steps
Through its first Ocean Resilience Innovation Challenge, ORRAA has supported AFO in refining its business model and in conducting research to quantify the amount of carbon sequestered by the restored forests. Subsequently, ORRAA has helped AFO to plant an additional 20,000 seedlings and reach two women’s groups with beehives, with direct financial support provided by the UK’s Blue Planet Fund. The support from ORRAA is also helping AFO set up a partnership with Plan Vivo to verify its estimates, provide certification of its carbon credits, and connect with potential voluntary buyers.
The project requires an initiating investment of US$ 387000 across 60,000 hectares of mangroves for implementation of the high-quality blue carbon estimates, verification and launching of the voluntary carbon trading. After successful establishment in the five villages, the project is expected to generate an estimated revenue of US$40,000 annually through sale of carbon credits to voluntary buyers and beekeeping. In its first 20 years, the project will enable the capture of over 60,000 tons of CO2, directly benefiting more than 6 million people living along the coast of Tanzania, while supporting fishery production and coastal protection. Beyond incentivising the restoration of precious ecosystems, the project will directly benefit the community by ensuring the funds raised go to finance village facilities such as water wells and education equipment. AFO has also earmarked 20% of the project’s revenue to be used for the creation of a Mangrove Conservation Fund dedicated to scale the initiative and expand it to three more mangrove endowed villages in North Tanzania by 2030.
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