Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme (ASAP)

Channeling climate and environmental finance to smallholder farmers

Smallholder farmers are on the frontline of climate change. They inhabit some of the most vulnerable landscapes, such as hillsides, rangelands, semi-arid and arid lands, deltas and flood plains, and rely on climate-sensitive natural resources to make a living.

As a result, they are at significant risk from increasing temperatures, erratic rainfall, pest infestations, rising sea levels, and extreme events such as floods, droughts, landslides, typhoons and heat waves.

Smallholders often lack secure land tenure and resource rights, and access to markets and finance. They are often overlooked in global and national policy debates on climate change issues despite the fact that poor rural communities bear the brunt of the impact of climate change and are key to the solution.

Since climate change exacerbates existing threats, development organizations must devise new financial and programming instruments to address complex emerging problems.

The Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme (ASAP) is IFAD’s flagship programme for channeling climate and environmental finance to smallholder farmers. The programme is incorporated into IFAD’s regular investment processes and benefits from rigorous quality control and supervision systems.

Thanks to the joint efforts and generous support of 10 donors, ASAP has received US$300 million in contributions. It has helped five million vulnerable smallholders in 41 countries cope with the impact of climate change and build more resilient livelihoods.

In the future, ASAP will ensure that approaches for addressing climate-related risks are integrated into all of IFAD’s portfolio of loans and grants.

The ASAP fund allows IFAD country programmes to design projects from a climate-informed perspective and leverage resources for technical assistance.

ASAP funds activities that focus on:

  • policy engagement –supporting agricultural institutions in IFAD Member States seeking to achieve international climate change commitments and national adaptation priorities;
  • climate risk assessment – facilitating the systematic use of climate risk information when planning investments to increase resilience;
  • women’s empowerment – increasing the participation of women in, and their benefits from, climate-change adaptation activities;
  • private-sector engagement – strengthening the participation of the private sector and farmer groups in climate change adaptation and mitigation activities;
  • climate services – enhancing the use of climate information for when planning investments to increase resilience;
  • natural resource management and governance – strengthening the participation and ownership of smallholder farmers in decision-making processes; and improving technologies for the governance and management of climate-sensitive natural resources;
  • knowledge management – enhancing the documentation and dissemination of knowledge on approaches to climate-resilient agriculture.

Spotlight

Spotlight

Statement of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) at the twenty-third session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 23) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

"We need to invest in the future that we want and accompany those who need support, leaving no one behind," said the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) in a statement released at the UNFCCC COP23 in Bonn.

Publicador de Conteúdo

Contacts

Brian J. Thomson

Senior Communication Specialist

b.thomson@ifad.org

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Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme (ASAP) brochure

Outubro 2015
The Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme (ASAP) was launched by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) in 2012 to make climate and environmental finance work for smallholder farmers. A multi-year and multi-donor financing window, ASAP provides a new source of cofinancing to scale up and integrate climate change adaptation across IFAD’s approximately US$1billion per year of new investments. The programme is joined up with IFAD’s regular investment processes and benefits from rigorous quality control and supervision systems. ASAP is driving a major scaling up of successful ‘multiple-benefit’ approaches to smallholder agriculture, which improve production while reducing and diversifying climate-related risks. In doing so, ASAP is blending tried-and tested approaches to rural development with relevant adaptation know-how and technologies. This will increase the capacity of at least 8 million smallholder farmers to expand their livelihood options in an uncertain and rapidly changing environment.
additional-languages: Arabic, English, Spanish, French, Russian

ASAP Bangladesh factsheet

Setembro 2014
Bangladesh is one of the world’s most vulnerable countries affected by climate change. During the monsoon period, the Haor region of Bangladesh becomes completely inundated with 4-8 metres of water for around 6-7 months of the year. Flash fl oods are common, and in some years 80-90 per cent of crops are lost because of extreme weather events. The situation is expected to worsen as a climate change-related shift towards pre-monsoon rainfall is coinciding with the paddy rice pre-harvest period. This severely affects food output in the Haor, which provides up to 16 per cent of national rice production.

ASAP Bolivia factsheet

Setembro 2014
ASAP resources are complementing the first component (natural resource management, investment in assets and enterprise development) of ACCESOS.

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