[CLOSE ❌]
Why Green Media Awards?
The motivation is to promote and sustain media coverage on the environment in Malawi and accelerate the agenda for sustainable utilization of Malawi’s natural resources.

  Eligibility
All journalists practising in Malawi are eligible to apply, however, AEJ members will have an added advantage. Each Journalist is eligible to submit a minimum of two stories per category for a maximum of three categories.

  Language
The jury will entertain materials in English and Chichewa only.

Categories
Agriculture (nutrition, irrigation e.t.c), Best blogger / On-line journalists, Climate Change, Disaster Risk Reduction, Energy, Forestry, Green Media House of the year, Mining, The Green Documentary, The Green Investigative/Accountability award, The Green Photojournalist of the year, Waste Management and Pollution, Water and Sanitation, Wildlife,  

Already Registered For Green Media Awards? Login Below!!!




New Participant Register Here

No assignment is worth your life. COVID-19 is real #staysafe. AEJ Online your trusted source for breaking environment news

Afr100 Land Accelerator Ups Restoration Grants

LILONGWE, Malawi, April 04, 2021 (AEJ) - Africa's land restoration entrepreneurs will this year get a major financial boost when they will be awarded US$5,000 launchpad grant. The move, is in support of AFR100, a pan African ecosystem initiative aimed at restoring 100 million hectares of degraded landscape come 2030.

In 2018, World Resources Institute (WRI) launched the land accelerator Africa, the world’s first training and mentorship program targeted specifically toward businesses that restore degraded forests, farmland, and pasture.

Land accelerator provides entrepreneurs across Africa with mentorship and networking opportunities, technical training, to build up their storytelling and pitching skills.

The program has attracted nearly 700 applicants in Africa, and its alumni report that they have created 2,200 jobs, worked with 56,000 farmers, restored 38,000 hectares, and grown million trees. Participants leave the program more empowered to connect with potential investors so that they can take their business to the next stage of growth.

Field visit by AFR100 participants during a platform held in Accra, Ghana in 2019

However, in 2021 AUDA – NEPAD the development of the African Union, World Resources Institute and Fledge are expanding the size of beneficiary cohort to 100 entrepreneurs from across the continent to an all-virtual business accelerator. Potential restoration entrepreneurs were invited to apply from all Sub-Saharan African countries, free of charge.

The selected 100 entrepreneurs will among other things benefit from three months of exclusive weekly trainings from experts, access to Fledge’s online lessons for start-up, templates to create content to help their business thrive They will also access weekly office hours with mentors who will lend their expertise, networking sessions to speak with and learn from other entrepreneurs in their cohort.

The first land accelerator brought together 12 restoration entrepreneurs from across Africa to Nairobi to learn how to scale up their businesses. Some have already seen success.

Some of the last beneficiairies include Kencoco in Kenya that makes charcoal briquettes from discarded coconut husks in coastal Kenya, providing a sustainable alternative to fuelwood. seed.uno/enterprise-profiles/kencoco-limited

In Zimbabwe Rejuvenate Umhlaba has been working to establish a thriving market for land restoration offsets in Africa. While Ghanaian Tilaa Ltd produces honey and cashews by working with local farmers through an integrated plantation. tilaaltd.com.

Worldwide over 3.2 billion people are at risk from land degradation. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization indicates that three million hectares of forest are lost and 65 percent of land is impacted by degradation in Africa annually.

Nearly two-thirds of Africa’s land is degraded, which hinders sustainable economic development and resilience to climate change. As a result, Africa has the largest restoration opportunity of any continent: more than 700 million hectares (1.7 billion acres) of degraded forest landscapes that can be restored. The potential benefits include improved food and water security, biodiversity protection, climate change resilience, and economic growth.

Ostrich captured in Ghana Achimota Forest Reserve a symbol of biodiversity interconnection to forests

The Land Accelerator in Africa is led by World Resources Institute in participation with AFR100. Fledge is the knowledge partner, providing world class skills-building and networking.

Related links :

https://thelandaccelerator.com/apply/africa/

www.nepad.org

www.wri.org

Post Documents

No Documents Available

Post Photo Gallery
  • tortoise
  • tortoise
Post Video Gallery

No Videos In Gallery

Similar Posts

About the Author
Charles Mkoka
Charles Mkoka is one of AEJ News Editorial Production Crew



Post Comment
Comments (13)