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EbA- enhanced climate field schools for climate resilience (EECCLiRe) is sponsored by the IUCN’s Global EbA fund. The project is implemented by SEI Asia along with su-re.co, a sustainability think-be-do tank in Indonesia, and Indonesia’s Met Bureau, BMKG, with support from local organisations such as Lembaga Advokasi Masyarakat (LAPMAS) in Bajawa, Flores and BUMDESA in Kintamani, Bali.
2023–2025
EECCLiRe responds to the need for sustainable intensification and climate-smart coffee production in the provinces of East Nusa Tenggara (ENT) and Bali in Indonesia. Both areas are climate risk hotspots and critical coffee production areas in the country. The project integrates ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) principles in conducting climate field schools among farmers involved in producing coffee. Coffee is an essential export commodity and a lynchpin of rural livelihoods in these two provinces. Outcomes will be achieved by redesigning and integrating EbA principles, agroforestry techniques, local and traditional knowledge, and climate-smart technologies in the climate field schools being conducted by the BMKG (Badan Meteorologi, Klimatologi, dan Geofisika), the Indonesian Met Bureau, and civil society actors. To ensure uptake and deepen impacts of the project, EECCLiRe will integrate alternative technologies to help farmers reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of their farms using biogas digesters, exploration of ecolabelling mechanisms to promote sustainable coffee production, and by assisting BMKG in developing proactive policies that improve the conduct of the field schools and expand them into other commodities. In the long term, the project will enhance the adaptive capacities and strengthen the social, environmental, and economic resilience of rural communities dependent on coffee through ecosystem-based adaptation.
The objective of this project is to contribute to the enhancement of the adaptive capacities and strengthening the social, environmental, and economic resilience of rural communities dependent on coffee and other important commodities such as cocoa in Bali and East Nusa Tenggara (ENT) in Indonesia
Ecosystem-based adaptation is a form of nature-based solutions for climate change. It is defined as “the use of biodiversity and ecosystem services as part of an overall adaptation strategy to help people adjust to the adverse effects of climate change.”
There are three main elements to the concept, (1) the goal is to help people adjust to climate change, (2) makes use of biodiversity and ecosystem services and (3) is part of an overall adaptation strategy. While EbA must include ecosystem conservation, it is overall people centered. By enhancing and utilizing conservation, sustainable management and restoration of ecosystems, ecosystem services are strengthened in turn building capacity of local communities. Read more about EbA here.
The Global EbA Fund is a catalytic funding mechanism for supporting innovative approaches to EbA to create enabling environments for its mainstreaming and scaling up. The fund is financed by the International Climate Initiative (IKI) of the German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection (BMUV) and co-managed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and partners. Learn more about the Fund and apply for a grant through the website here.
For an engaging visualization of ECCLiRe, please visit its StoryMap, where maps and multimedia content are integrated to convey project information.
Perspective / Hear local perspectives on the challenges faced by coffee farmers in Indonesia when joining global eco-labelling schemes.
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Perspective / Explore how Indonesia's Climate Field Schools bolster coffee farmers' resilience amid climate change threats.
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