Together possible - Program contribution WWF Switzerland Global Engagement Program (GEP) 2023–2024
The World Wide Fund for Nature Switzerland is a Swiss NGO funded by foundations, private donors and its 300’000 members. As a fully autonomous organization it is part of WWF’s global network, which is present in almost 100 countries. Through and jointly with local WWF offices, it works towards sustaining natural resources such as freshwater, forests and coastlines whilst improving the livelihoods of disadvantaged and marginalized communities depending on functioning ecosystem services.
Land/Region | Thema | Periode | Budget |
---|---|---|---|
Weltweit |
Klimawandel & Umwelt Gouvernanz Inclusive economic Development
Umweltpolitik
Politik des öffentlichen Sektors Gewerbeunterstützung & Wirtschaftszugang |
01.01.2023
- 31.12.2024 |
CHF 4’200’000
|
- WWF Switzerland
- World Wide Fund for Nature Switzerland (WWF-CH)
-
Sektor nach Kategorisierung des Entwicklungshilfeekomitees der OECD ALLGEMEINER UMWELTSCHUTZ
REGIERUNG UND ZIVILGESELLSCHAFT
BUSINESS & OTHER SERVICES
Sub-Sektor nach Kategorisierung des Entwicklungshilfeekomitees der OECD Politik und Verwaltung im Umweltschutzbereich
Politik und Verwaltung im öffentlichen Sektor
Services et institutions de soutien commerciaux
Querschnittsthemen Projekt fördert schwerpunktmässig die Biodiversität.
Konfliktreduktion
Projekt unterstützt auch Verbesserungen in der Partnerorganisation
Unterstützungsform Kernbeitrag
Projektnummer 7F10618
Hintergrund |
The world faces an unprecedented ecological crisis due to the over-exploitation of natural resources and global warming, which threatens the functioning of ecosystems and therefore the people that depend on them for their livelihood and survival. At the global level, the scale of destruction to date is immense: 35% of global forests have been lost and an additional 10 million hectares are destroyed annually, the number of overfished stocks has tripled in half a century and more than half of the world’s natural freshwater ecosystems have been destroyed, eradicating the income foundation of communities across the global South. The unparalleled loss of natural habitats and related ecosystem services has wide-ranging knock-on effects as they constitute the very foundation for livelihood of millions of people, decrease resilience of people towards external shocks and prepare the ground for the spread of zoonotic diseases such as Covid-19. The Global South experiences higher negative impacts due to often lacking good governance, low gender equality and shrinking space for civil society. Unless environmental degradation is reversed, inequality, vulnerability and poverty challenges will be exacerbated whilst humanitarian crises, migratory pressure and the spread of zoonotic diseases multiply. |
Ziele | By 2030, significant progress has been made to stabilise the climate and prevent the most devastating effects of climate change, to restore and sustain natural resources and to enhance equality, peace, and healthy living for all. |
Resultate des Engagement der Organisation der vorangehenden Phase |
Outcome 1 - Engagement, Commitment & Action: Outcome 2 - Participation & Empowerment: Outcome 3 - Awareness & Education: Outcome 4 - Ecosystems & Livelihoods: |
Resultate des Schweizer Engagement der vorangehenden Phase |
Being an independent civil society organisation organized in a global network, WWF has a long track record of engagement with CSOs, communities, community-based organisations, and civic institutions in a wide range of countries and contexts. WWF-CH’s role in strengthening local civil society varies depending on each national context and the strategy of the WWF partner office. In each of its projects, WWF collaborates with rights-holder groups and wider civil society to strengthen partnership opportunities with duty-bearers and governments to ensure representation of interests, as well as alignment with and achievement of national priorities and enhancement of national ownership. For many years, WWF-CH as well as WWF’s international network have been committed to progressive employment conditions and strengthening gender equality at all levels. To further build staff capacity in gender mainstreaming and human rights-based approach, WWF-CH developed a comprehensive training course for local WWF trainers on human rights due diligence in conservation projects (30 WWF offices involved). With new SDC structures in place, WWF-CH aims for a closer collaboration with SDC’s Green Cluster in the future, thereby strengthening common knowledge on the preservation and valorization of ecosystem services for livelihoods. |
Mittelfristige Wirkung des gegenwärtigen Engagements der Organisation |
Outcome 1: Engagement, Commitment & Action Outcome 2: Participation & Empowerment Outcome 3: Awareness & Education Outcome 4: Ecosystems & Livelihoods |
Mittelfristige Wirkung des gegenwärtigen Engagements der Schweiz |
Outcome 1: WWF-CH strengthens civil society and country ownership in accordance with the provisions of the “OECD-DAC Recommendation on Enabling Civil Society” and the relevant “GPEDC principles”. Outcome 2: WWF-CH and the SDC Green Cluster share experiences in a common learning process on the preservation and valorization of ecosystem services for livelihoods. |
Verantwortliche Direktion/Bundesamt |
DEZA |
Projektpartner |
Vertragspartner Schweizerische Non-Profit-Organisation |
Budget | Laufende Phase Schweizer Beitrag CHF 4’200’000 Bereits ausgegebenes Schweizer Budget CHF 4’200’000 |
Projektphasen |
Phase
3
01.01.2025
- 31.12.2026
(Laufende Phase)
Phase 2 01.01.2023 - 31.12.2024 (Completed) |