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2009 Grant Competition
ClimateAdaptation
www.developmentmarketplace.org
What is the Development Marketplace?
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
The Development Marketplace is a competitive grantprogram that identifies and funds innovative, early stagedevelopment projects with high potential for developmentimpact and replication. Administered by the World Bank andfunded by various partners, DM has awarded more that $54million to innovative projects identified through country,regional and global DM competitions.
Buzz at the marketplace floor, DM2008
Key Client: Social Entrepreneurs
Pioneers aiming to create transformational changefor disadvantaged communities and ultimately forsociety at large.
DM2006 Project: Mexican students drinking clean water from a UV-filter bucket.
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Global Competitions DM2003-2008:
31 Projects
30 Projects
22 Projects 22 Projects
DM2005SustainableLivelihoods
DM2006 Water,Sanitation and
Energy
DM2007 Health,Nutrition and
Population
DM2008SustainableAgriculture
$3.9M $4.9M $4M $4.1M
Aw
ard
Po
ol
(US
D,
Mil
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n)
DM2009: Climate Adaptation
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
DM2008 throphies
13 Month Cycle of Global Competition
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Why Climate Adaptation?
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Developing countries need additional financing to adapt to climate change
Addressing climate change is critical to development and poverty reduction
The poorest countries and communities stand to suffer the earliest and the most from the effects of climate change.
An effective response to climate change must combine both mitigation of global GHG emissions—to avoid the unmanageable—and adaptation at the regional, national, and local levels—to manage the unavoidable
There is a huge funding gap for adaptation (and mitigation)
The development community needs to build knowledge about adaptation to climate change
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Urgent Challenge for Developing Countries - 6 Climate Threats
Drought Flood Storm Coastal 1m Coastal 5m Agriculture
Malawi Bangladesh PhilippinesAll low-lying Island
StatesAll low-lying Island
States Sudan
Ethiopia China Bangladesh Vietnam Netherlands Senegal
Zimbabwe India Madagascar Egypt Japan Zimbabwe
India Cambodia Vietnam Tunisia Bangladesh Mali
Mozambique Mozambique Moldova Indonesia Philippines Zambia
Niger Laos Mongolia Mauritania Egypt Morocco
Mauritania Pakistan Haiti China Brazil Niger
Eritrea Sri Lanka Samoa Mexico Venezuela India
Sudan Thailand Tonga Myanmar Senegal Malawi
Chad Vietnam China Bangladesh Fiji Algeria
Kenya Benin Honduras Senegal Vietnam Ethiopia
Iran Rwanda Fiji Libya Denmark Pakistan
Middle Income
Low Income
Source: World Bank
DM2009 on Climate Adaptation
Resilience of Indigenous Peoples’ Communities to Climate Risks Promote Indigenous Peoples communities’ and organizations’ development of innovative ways to conserve
agriculture, land, water and soil management practices; apply innovative adaptation plans and communication strategies based on Indigenous systems to accelerate learning and knowledge sharing on climate change adaptation.
Climate Risk Management with Multiple Benefits Empower poor communities to test innovative, low-cost strategies to spread climate risk and
forge innovative partnerships that increase vulnerable communities’ access to climate risk management knowledge, information, and services that produces multiple social and environmental benefits; use innovative means to help educate communities on climate risks that leads to empowerment for action.
Climate Adaptation and Disaster Risk Management Develop innovative arrangements that diffuse climate-related disaster risks faced by the poor
and vulnerable; create innovative low-cost approaches for spatial planning for climate resilience and for construction of housing and local infrastructure resistant to climate-related disasters; improve the capacity of local communities to access and use multi-hazard risk information to enhance their early warning systems and other community-based responses to climatic extremes and climate change.
Sub-Themes Sub-Themes
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Who can apply?
For sub-theme two and three, non-governmental organizations, civil society organizations, foundations and development agencies based in the country of implementation may apply without additional partners. All other groups must partner with at least one organization; the type of partnership varies across types of applicants. Individuals cannot apply.
Special eligibility criteria apply to sub-theme one.1
2
3
For more details on partnerships and eligibility criteria check the
guidelines on the DM website.
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Academia18%
Development Agency
14%
Non-Governmental Organization
59%
Private Business
9%
Organization Type: DM08
How to apply?
DM2009 Climate AdaptationDM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
LanguageConsistent with past World Bank small grant programs for Indigenous Peoples, proposals for sub-theme one may be submitted in English, Spanish or French. For sub-themes two and three, proposals must be submitted in English.
How do I apply? Proposals must be submitted through the DM online application form available on the DM website. If you do not have access to internet, you can contact the nearest World Bank Public Information Center. Only proposals received before the submission deadline indicated online will be considered.
How will projects be selected?
Innovation: Does the idea differ from existing approaches?
Realism: Is the implementation time frame and budget realistic? Does the organization have the capacity to implement the project?
1
2
3
4
5
Results: Will the idea have clear and measurable results that will have a direct development impact on-the-ground?
Sustainability: Does the idea have a financing strategy beyond the life of the DM project?
Growth Potential: Is there potential for expansion? Can the project be implemented elsewhere?
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
DM08 Assessors selecting finalists
Past DM winners: DM2005 ProjectCredit for Safe Collection of Used Oil, Kenya US $150,000
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Project idea
• To clean the Mukuru-Ngong River in Nairobi, offering a credit system to encourage mechanics to collect used engine oil instead of dumping it into the river.
Development Potential
• Safely disposes of used oil while providing previously unattainable access to credit for business expansion.
• Used lubricating oil a significant contaminant to the Mukuru-Ngong river, resulting in negative health and environmental conditions
Progress to date
• 247,000 liters of used oil which would have otherwise been dumped into the river was collected and recycled into the economy. Project aims to recycle 1,200,000 liters of used oil each year by 2012.
• Over $31,000 lent to at least 56 mechanics groups or garages, in loans ranging from $120 to $500.
Past DM winners: DM2005 projectCommunity Carbon Collectors: Briquetting in Kenya US$132,773
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Project idea
• Reduce waste and energy costs by buying discarded charcoal dust collected by Nairobi’s slum dwellers and transform it into low-cost, clean-burning briquettes
Development Potential
• Provides a reliable income stream
• Offers a fuel alternative that is 40 percent cheaper than charcoal
• Reduces pollution from charcoal waste in the air and water
Progress to date
• 11 tons of dust collected daily, 6 tons from Kibera -the biggest slum in Kenya- and 5 tons from other sites in Nairobi
• 9 tons per day of charcoal briquettes produced and sold profitably to restaurants, poultry farmers, and supermarkets, among others
Past DM winners: DM 2006 project - IndiaClean & Reliable LED Lighting for Tribal Homes, US$177,250
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
Project idea
• To provide clean and reliable lighting to 10,000 tribal households using LED light units and a community-based maintenance plan.
• $15 lamp paid for over 50 cent bi-weekly installments.
Development Potential
• Replaces kerosene lamps, which provide limited light, cause indoor pollution and incur a heavier economic burden
Progress to date
• 2,500 LED lights sold in India• 100 village entrepreneurs trained
in selling and maintaining lamps• Now collaborating with similar
initiatives in Afghanistan, Cambodia and Kenya.
• Leveraged a total of $ 1.4 Million from a private investment company.
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
UV Bucket to Disinfect Water, MexicoDM2006, $170,310
Project Idea
• Produce and distribute a cheap UV water purification system to poor residents of Baja California.
Progress to date
Results• Expansion: Guatemala and Nicaragua• Market Growth: selling HotPots to 5
million Mexicans by 2013 under the “100% Clean Water for Mexico” program
New Partnerships• Government of Mexico
DM Role
• Seed capital to launch the project, produce the first 3500 buckets and prove concept and viability.
• Connections with Government of Mexico for replication.
More Information
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org
www.developmentmarketplace.org
http://dmblog.worldbank.org/
Submission deadline: MAY 18, 2009MAY 18, 2009Guidelines in English, Spanish and French
More information: FAQ
Visit:
Or write to:[email protected]
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Thank you!
DM2009 Climate Adaptationwww.developmentmarketplace.org