Partnerships for Sustainable Development - CSD Partnerships Database   |  
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  • Government partners: Mali

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  • African Union Initiative On Promotion and Development of Agenda 21 in Africa
  • Lead Partner: Environment General Agency - Environment General Agency - Environment General Agency
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Africa
    Summary:
    The main objectives of the initiative are:
    ♦ To critically assess successes and failures in implementing Rio decisions in each member AU country
    ♦ To focus on the identification of accomplishments and areas where further efforts are needed to implement Agenda 21.
    ♦ To ensure that all members of African Union must have a safer more prosperous future by dealing with environment protection economic development and social development issues inbalanced manner.
    ♦ Accelerated economic and social development of Africa with better care for environment
    ♦ Awareness raising at regional, national and local level and further promote Agenda 21 in Africa. [more]
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  • Capacity Building on the applications of ICT for the establishment of Environmental Information Systems for Sustainable Development in Africa - SISEI
  • Lead Partner: United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) - International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Africa
    Summary:
    In preparation for the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), and in the framework of the New Partnership for Africa's Development, the partners of this initiative have agreed to jointly develop a capacity building programme on the applications of Information and Communication Technologies for the establishment of Environmental Information Systems for Sustainable Development in Africa.
    This partnership aims at initiating a national and sub regional capacity building programme, on the applications of the new information and communication technologies for the establishment of environmental information management and monitoring systems in Africa. It aims at generating adequate conditions for the establishment of a coherent and efficient institutional framework, and the development and appropriation of technological tools for the accessing, exchange and circulation of useful information.
    Significant efforts are being made to manage natural resources and the environment, involving scientific and technical research, the implementation of appropriate programmes and projects in the field, and the harnessing of local know-how. The results, in the form of products, information and data, represent a unique scientific, technical and cultural heritage for sustainable development and the fight against poverty in Africa.
    However, it has to be recognized that this information heritage is often dispersed on account of sectoral compartmentalization at the inter-institutional level, resulting of an apparent lack of information at the local level which contradicts the existence in reality of an information heritage within national and international institutions or bodies specializing in Africa throughout the world. This loss of "institutional memory" is now recognized as being one of the major obstacles to sustainable development in Africa.
    The general objective of this initiative is to provide countries and regional organizations with systems for the validation, circulation and harnessing of relevant environmental information with a view to strengthening the participative approach at the different decision-making and operational levels and thereby promoting enlightened decision-making.
    Specific objectives of the partnership are to respond to the needs expressed by a large number of environmental stakeholders in developing countries. As well as being a technological tool, it seeks to encourage the environmental community to share experiences and information heritage, balancing information supply and demand.
    This approach aims to create a synergy of both human and financial resources, establishing environmental information systems within national programmes such as national development plans, national environmental action plans, poverty eradication plans, etc. It will also catalyze the development of National and Regional Spatial Data Infrastructures (NSDI and RSDI) for use in planning and decision making for sustainable development [more]
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  • Development Strategies to Promote Rural Energy Systems
  • Lead Partner: United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    Assisting requesting countries to elaborate national rural energy development strategies. This activity will include the formulation of the strategy, discussions at multi-stakeholder workshops, and identification of national and international partners [more]
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  • Expanded OUZIT Project - Okavango Upper Zambezi International Tourism Spatial Development Initiative
  • Lead Partner: Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) - Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA)
    Geographical Scope: Sub-regional Southern Africa
    Summary:
    The Expanded OUZIT Project is an integrated tourism development strategy aimed at establishing a comprehensive tourism and resource development zone in SADC.
    The agreed project roll out would see the Expanded OUZIT project proceed on two parallel tracks:
    a) As an integral part of the WSSD - focused on presenting SADC's TFCA's (Transfrontier Conservation Areas) - proposed and existing, as a unifying theme demonstrating the region's commitment and leadership in the preservation of bio-diversity, the conservation of two of the region's last remaining and largely untapped river systems (i.e. Okavango, and Zambezi), and as a vehicle for the upliftment and sustainable development for the rural poor.
    b) The second track for progressing the Expanded OUZIT will be project driven and draw upon the TFCA scoping study.
    Accordingly the agreed project roll out will:
    1. Identify and prepare documentation for at least three (3) new large-scale investments in Resort Hubs around which to network TFCAs.
    2. Support Capacity Building in the management and expansion of Gateway/Resort Hubs in participating member states.
    3. Identify high profile and active global investors (including airlines and major tour operators) and organize a programme to engage them.
    4. Address bottlenecks (infrastructure, policy, financial, load factors) impeding the provision of long haul and inter-regional air transport services. [more]
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  • Global Village Energy Partnership, The
  • Lead Partner: Energy Sector Management Assistance Program - United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    GVEP brings together developing and industrialized country governments, public and private organisations, multilateral institutions, NGOs, civil society organizations, consumers, and others to increase access to energy services for those unserved and underserved in a manner that enhances economic and social development, and reduces poverty.

    GVEP objectives are fourfold:
    · To catalyse country commitments to energy for poverty reduction projects and programmes, and to guide policies and investment in this area.
    · To bridge the gap between investors, entrepreneurs, and customers in the design, installation, and operation of replicable rural and peri-urban energy projects.
    · To serve as a one-stop-shop for information, best practices, and lessons learned on the effective development and implementation of energy for poverty reduction projects and programmes.
    · To create and maintain an effective Global Village Energy Partnership organisational structure.
    [more]
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  • Great Apes Survival Project (GRASP)
  • Lead Partner: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) - United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Great Apes Survival Project (GRASP)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    Main objective of the Partnership is to lift the threat of imminent or medium term extinction faced by the four main kinds of great apes (bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans.

    The immediate objectives leading to the achievement of the Partnership's goal include;
    - To promote the Global Strategy for the Survival of Great Apes and Their Habitat;
    - To determine the potential of sites, monitor populations of great apes and establish a database of great ape population information;
    - To collate and analyse existing projects and initiatives at different levels, in order to identify gaps and set priorities in action and to encourage coordination and cooperation;
    - To encourage range States to prepare and implement national action plans for the survival of great ape populations and their habitat and ensure that they have the necessary resources to do so;
    - To prioritize the use of resources for optimum effectiveness and identify funding areas that are currently neglected and underfunded;
    - To promote and enforce a legal framework for the survival of great apes and their habitat in the countries concerned;
    - To identify and support income-generating initiatives for the benefit of communities living in and around great ape habitat and protected areas, with due consideration for indigenous communities and to ensure, where it becomes imperative to resettle indigenous people in conformity with United Nations guidelines, that compensation is paid with international support;
    - To educate and raise awareness among local populations;
    - To help generate new and additional funds for the survival of great apes and their habitat and to ensure that the international community in the widest sense (donor States, international organizations and institutions, non-governmental organizations and representatives of private business and industry) provides effective and coherent support to the efforts being made by the great ape range States.

    [more]
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  • Intergovernmental Forum on Mining, Minerals, Metals and Sustainable Development
  • Lead Partner: Government of Canada - Natural Resources - Government of South Africa - Department of Minerals and Energy
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    The objective of the Intergovernmental Forum is to enhance and promote the contribution of the mining, minerals and metals sector to sustainable development.

    The functions of the Intergovernmental Forum are consultative and advisory based on the principles of voluntary partnership. The Forum provides governments with a framework in which to discuss the opportunities provided by mining, minerals and metals and to respond to the challenges they pose. The Intergovernmental Forum will meet to share experiences and information, to consider and to provide advice and, where appropriate, make recommendations for consideration by governments, intergovernmental bodies and others. The Intergovernmental Forum will meet at high level or officials level, as appropriate. [more]
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  • NetMark Plus: A Public-Private Partnership for Sustainable Malaria Prevention
  • Lead Partner: Academy for Educational Development (AED)
    Geographical Scope: Regional - Africa
    Summary:
    Building on the partnership efforts at the WSSD, the United States expanded its existing NetMark Program, making it an expansive and cutting edge model for achieving public health objectives through joint investment with the commercial sector. What was originally a 5 year, $15.4 million program designed to create sustainable commercial markets for insecticide-treated mosquito nets in four countries, became an eight year, $65.4 million program with a much broader goals. NetMark Plus is USAID's primary mechanism to support the Roll Back Malaria Partnership in achieving its goals of making high quality, and affordable ITNs available across the continent of Africa. Now looking to build commercial markets for ITNs in at least 10 countries, NetMark is expanding its partnerships, playing a critical role in defining best practices for delivering targeted subsidies, advocating a positive policy environment, creating integrated approaches through partnerships with NGOs that link commercial and subsidized product delivery, and helping to introduce state-of-the-art products (some of which will be manufactured in Africa).
    NetMark Plus expects to create fully sustainable markets for ITNs across sub-Saharan Africa that can provide a sustainable source of quality products for a large percentage of at-risk populations. NetMark Plus will also link these markets with targeted subsidies being provided through other donor-funded activities, helping both the public and commercial sectors to create a model for sustainable development through mutually beneficial collaboration and investment on a large scale. This will result in a reduction of malaria morbidity and mortality, a positive effect on the African economy, and reduction of the burden on the international community and ministries of health in procuring and distributing ITNs. [more]
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  • Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development (SARD) Initiative: People Shaping their Sustainable Futures
  • Lead Partner: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
    Geographical Scope: Global
    Summary:
    This is a civil society led, government supported, FAO facilitated undertaking.The preliminary focus of the SARD Initiative has currently been focusing on three themes, which were discussed in the International Conference on Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development in Mountain Regions (Adelboden, Switzerland, 6/2002), in the SARD Electronic Forum (6/2002-present) and in a number of local consultations in different regions of the developing world and among some of the NGOs/CSOs attending the World Food Summit: five years later (6/2002). Sub-Initiatives can be organized around the following or other thematic areas of action, based on the interests, priorities, commitment and resources of specific partners involved:
    * Access to resources
    * Fair conditions of employment
    * Good Agricultural Practices for SARD

    Given the critical mass of Mountain Governments supporting the SARD Initiative in the Adelboden Declaration, the relevant sub-Initiatives outlined in the Adelboden Plan of Action, and that 2002 is the International Year of the Mountains, it has been proposed that the Initiative should begin with a mountain focus, subject to the interest and resources of concerned stakeholders. The Initiative may capitalize on other key conferences and International Years, for instance, 2003 is the International Year of Fresh Water. [more]
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