2024.3414.0

Promoting sustainable peatland management for people, climate and biodiversity

Sustainable peatland management for people, climate and biodiversity (Peat4People)
Client
Bundesministerium für wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit u. Entwicklung
Country
Rwanda, Uganda
Runtime
Partner
Bundesministerium für wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung
Contact

Dr. Claudia Mayer

Contact us
A person holding peat in their hands in Rwanda.

Context

Peatlands are ecosystems with an important role to play in climate protection and the preservation of intact landscapes. In many regions, they provide the foundations for human well-being. They store roughly twice as much carbon as the world’s forests, while providing protection from floods, ensuring safe drinking water and offering habitats for many plant and animal species. Yet peatlands are seriously threatened by drainage for agriculture, peat extraction and infrastructure development. In Uganda and Rwanda, this is generating extensive greenhouse gas emissions and causing the loss of important ecosystem functions.

Objective

Key stakeholders and local communities are enabled to better conserve and manage peatlands in Uganda and Rwanda. A lasting balance has been achieved between the protection of these valuable ecosystems and their sustainable use.

Approach

The project connects and improves policy and decision-making processes, economic incentives and nature conservation measures, with the aim of promoting land use that balances the needs of people and nature. To achieve this, it is working with the Michael Succow Foundation – a partner in the Greifswald Mire Centre (MSF-GMC) – and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) as implementation partners.

The project supports key stakeholders and local communities to take science-based decisions. It promotes paludiculture, a sustainable way of using wet or rewetted peatlands that enables the creation of products from peatland landscapes while preserving their ecosystems. The project is also piloting financing options for the long-term conservation of peatlands. It promotes regional and international dialogue to support the sharing of successful approaches and reciprocal learning. 
Papyruspflanzen in Uganda.
Further Project Information

CRS code
41030

Policy markers

Principal (primary) policy objective:

  • Biodiversity

Significant (secondary) policy objectives:

  • Gender Equality
  • Climate Change: Adaptation
  • Climate Change: Mitigation

Responsible organisational unit
G330 Umweltpolitik, Biodiversität, Wald

Financial commitment for the actual implementation phase
9,500,000 €

This project focuses on the following GIZ work priorities: The project contributes to these Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations:

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