CRIWMP

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WHERE WE WORK

The project will use a river basin/ sub-basin approach to deliver an integrated package of interventions for irrigation and drinking water. The selection of cascades has considered income poverty, multi-dimensional poverty and disaster impact on these communities as criteria.
The selected river basins are Malwatu Oya, Mi Oya, and Yan Oya with watersheds situated almost entirely in the Dry Zone, resulting in highly unreliable water yields and flow in these rivers. The Mi Oya river basin has been identified as the most vulnerable river basin in the country (See Annex II, Feasibility Report, Section 5.2 for rationale), and all three are situated in areas currently facing drinking water challenges. Given that vulnerabilities arising as a result of poor quality drinking water are difficult to be addressed with a purely river basin approach (water quality is also dependent on the presence of fluorides and contaminated groundwater aquifers cut across river basin boundaries), interventions to provide good quality drinking water will expand to districts connected to the targeted river basins i.e. Kurunegala, Puttalam, Anuradhapura, Mannar,Trincomalee, Vavuniya and Polonnaruwa Districts.
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River Basins

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Districts

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Direct Beneficiaries

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Indirect Beneficiaries

TARGETING BENEFICIARIES:

Within selected cascades the Project will target households meeting the vulnerability criteria (one or more) for specific investments on climate smart agriculture, rainwater  harvesting, community water supply programmes and flood early warning dvisories, including:

Women headed households
Young unemployed women in target villages
Households with disability or kidney disease
Conflict displaced/resettled
Flood affected in the last five years
Families with children/women displaying low nutrition (underweight/ anemic)
Households with at-risk subgroups such as children and girls (children charged with householdsduties, neglected children not attending school, girls at risk)

THE PROJECT STRATEGY

The key objective of this Project is to strengthen the resilience of smallholder farmers in the Dry Zone to climate variability and extreme events through an integrated approach to water management. This will be achieved through three outputs that build upon previous experience and best practice:

VIS Rehabilitation

Upgrading village irrigation systems and promoting climate resilient farming practices in three river basins of the Dry Zoon: USD 21.04(SLR3, 113Million)
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Safe Dirking Water

Enhancing Decentralized water supply and management solutions to provide access to safe drinking water to vulnerable communities: Budget:USD 9.9
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Disaster Management

Strengthening climate / Weather and hydrological observing, forecasting and water management systems to enhance adaptive capacity ..
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Climate Smart Agriculture

Amongst numerous activities which improve the resilience of climatic vulnerable farmers, measures to enhance the agriculture-based livelihoods of smallholder farmers have taken a very significant place.
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Other GCF Projects

The Green Climate Fund partnered with Ministry of Irrigation , Multiple Agencies, and International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and the International Center for Research in Agroforestry (ICRAF)


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Wari Saubhagya

National Programme in which the Ministry of Irrigation is empowering the national policy Vision for Prosperity, by implementing the development of 5000 prosperity focused rural irrigation systems