(From left) Margareta Wahlstrom, head of  the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, and HE Tumusiime Rhoda Peace, Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, African Union, at today's announcement in Addis Ababa of EU support for disaster risk management. (Photo: UNISDR)
(From left) Margareta Wahlstrom, head of the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, and HE Tumusiime Rhoda Peace, Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, African Union, at today's announcement in Addis Ababa of EU support for disaster risk management. (Photo: UNISDR)

14 July 2015, ADDIS ABABA – Details of an €80 million package of support from the European Union to disaster risk management across sub-Saharan Africa over the next five years, were unveiled today at the Third International Conference on Financing for Development.

Margareta Wahlström, the head of the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR), said: “This is a strategic long-term investment in building resilience in Africa. It will help to reduce mortality and economic losses by improving preparedness, early warning systems and putting in place systems for understanding how disaster losses are generated in order to avoid them in the future.”

Roberto Ridolfi, Director for Sustainable Growth and Development in Europeaid, said: "Resilience has many facets. Natural and climate related hazards dominate the disaster profile of Sub Saharan African. A holistic approach to building disaster resilience and to secure development gains in Africa, based on accurate risk information and improved decision support systems, is therefore necessary – and with this programme we will make an important contribution to achieve this goal."

The programme “Building Disaster Resilience to Natural Hazards in Sub-Saharan African Regions, Countries and Communities”, an initiative of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States, will be financed by the European Union within the frame of the 10th European Development Fund. It will support countries to reach the targets for substantial reductions in disaster losses laid out in the new global agreement, the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction.

The five result areas are: enhanced regional coordination and DRR monitoring (African Union Commission and UNISDR ), enhanced capacity of regional economic communities for coordination and planning (World Bank/GFDRR ), improved capacity of regional climate centres for weather and climate services and real-time early warning systems (African Development Bank/ClimDev), improved risk knowledge for future risk modeling (UNISDR), and enhanced financial strategies for informed decision-making (World Bank/GFDRR).

Attachments

Document links last validated on: 18 December 2019

Explore further

Country and region Afghanistan

Also featured on

Is this page useful?

Yes No
Report an issue on this page

Thank you. If you have 2 minutes, we would benefit from additional feedback (link opens in a new window).