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Approximately 812 awareness-raising sessions have been organized in the two years since the activity
began, which targeted various segments of the community. Training sessions have also been
organized, focussing on organizational development, adaptation to coastal erosion and the
impact of climate change on the fishing community. Around 500 people have been trained to date,
including include women's associations, local elected officials, and neighbourhood
committees. As a result, a network of coastal actors has been established, where community
members better understand the impacts of climate change and are better able to face them.
In addition, 104 radio programs were produced. The programmes dealt with issues such as climate
change and coastal erosion.
In Joal, a more than 3,000 meter anti-salt dike has been built, which will help reclaim 17 hectares
of rice farm land. The drying area for fishery products was also rehabilitated. Its management
has been entrusted to a local committee composed of women fish sellers with the support of the
municipality, benefiting some 100 women. The facility will also help protect houses, hotels and
fish processing areas from storm
surges.
Similarly, the 730 metre dike in Rufisque protects the neighbourhood of Thiawelene from storm
surges.
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In Joal, improved fish processing will help reduce the pressure on natural resources in the area,
through a reduction in the amount of fuel wood. The building of the anti-salt dyke will enhance
food security, with improved coverage and yields of rice fields. It is expected that more than 5,000
producers will benefit from this infrastructure. Finally, the rehabilitation of the fish unloading dock
will maintain the livelihoods of hundreds of households, thus reducing the vulnerability of a community
largely relying in this major economic
activity.
In Rufisque, the construction of a seawall along the coastline, will protect houses that are being
threatened by coastal erosion, a problem which effects the town's historical heritage (as many
colonial houses have been effected). As waste water management is also a problem, the NGO Green Senegal
is raising awareness of residents on best practices for waste water management.
The preservation of hotels and other tourist infrastructures, as well as the fishing dock in Saly will
help maintain at least three thousand (3,000) direct jobs and nine thousand (9,000) indirect, generated
by tourism and fishing.
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The activity has received considerable attention from both developing and developed countries, and from
different types of stakeholder groups. It is already being replicated in other countries, thereby
leading to its scaling up world-wide. Some of the first projects to replicate the modality include an
agriculture sector project in Uruguay, a multi-sector programme in Jamaica and the development of a
coastal development project in Benin. The implementing agency of the project has been repeatedly
invited to present their experience in adaptation related workshops in neighbouring countries, as well
as farther afield, such as Ethiopia, South Africa, Thailand and Philippines.
The direct access modality gives countries project ownership and has an enormous potential for global
transformational change in how adaptation is implemented world-wide, cost-effectively and in a
country-driven manner, thereby bringing about a sustainable long-term impact. In the case of Senegal,
this has turned out to reduce administrative costs. The low administrative costs of the project
directly translate into making better use of allocated funds to achieve the scale of results. The fact
that the level of direct international supervision is replaced with supervision by a national agency
that went through a rigorous accreditation process using internationally accepted standards, has
catalyzed a change in institutional dynamic by reducing distance between levels of hierarchy. This has
greatly facilitated the collaboration of various types of governmental and non-governmental
organizations, including a sizable community of artisanal fishermen and fish-processing industries,
tourism operators, agricultural producers on the inland side of the coastal zone, a women’s group
and an environmental non governmental
organization.
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