Gambia confronts climate change in a bid to slow youth exodus

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The following morning, dawn light revealed the devastation: half of her roof was gone and 85 per cent of her groundnut crops were destroyed. 

“I was very sad because I had no knowledge of how to make money,” the 32-year-old mother-of-three recalls. “I told [my husband] ‘Can’t we consider you going to Europe?’” 

It was a path many of their neighbours had taken. In 2023, nearly 15,000 Gambians migrated to Europe, many braving the perilous waters of the Mediterranean Sea. 

But Kijera and her husband found an alternative. They joined Gambia’s largest project devoted to helping communities adapt to climate change. Backed by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), project teams showed the couple how to process and market foods made from locally grown crops, such as millet, chilli peppers and one drought-tolerant grain.  

“The project equipped me with skills that I need,” says Kijera. 

 

 A woman pours seeds from a large bowl onto a table.
A UNEP-supported project is helping to create jobs for people in rural Gambia, slowing migration abroad. Credit: UNEP/Lisa Murray

A slender thread of land on the coast of West Africa, Gambia is on the frontlines of the climate crisis.  

Rising sea levels are pushing saltwater up the country’s main waterway, the Gambia River, rendering once-fertile rice paddies unusable. Meanwhile, erratic rainfall, intensifying droughts and severe storms are wreaking havoc on crops like groundnuts and millet. 

As a result, between 2016 and 2022, the percentage of Gambians facing food insecurity more than tripled to 27 per cent

The decline of agriculture has forced many to turn to unsustainable work, such as charcoal production, which has contributed to deforestation, research suggests.  

Many rural residents are abandoning Gambia altogether; the country has one of Africa’s highest rates of irregular migration to Europe. A good number cross the treacherous Mediterranean Sea, a voyage that claimed the lives of almost 2,500 migrants of all nationalities in 2024 alone.   

“The crop loss due to climate change has made agriculture not only intolerable, but it's not an option for most youth,” says Malanding Jaiteh from Gambia’s Ministry of Environment. “Every single community that you visit, there is somebody who has gone (to Europe), and there are many who have died on the way.” 

 

An aerial photograph showing dry, uncultivated farmland. 
Empty farmland in Gambia’s Upper River Region during the dry season. Credit: UNEP/Lisa Murray

​​​By helping communities cope with a changing climate, the UNEP-backed project is altering that calculus. Funded by the Green Climate Fund and implemented by Gambia’s Ministry of Environment, the effort is creating economic opportunities for communities by harnessing the power of nature and restoring degraded ecosystems. 

Kijera, the groundnut farmer, participated in a series of trainings at one of eight multipurpose centers constructed by the project. Teams provided equipment, training and business development coaching. This helped Kijera and 200 other people across the country establish ecologically sustainable businesses, which in total have generated US$2.46 million in income.  

A wide shot showing a posed family photograph of a woman and a man holding two young children in front of a house.
Mangasa Kijera and her husband Ensa Drammel pose for a photo with their two children at their home in Kerewan Nyakoi in Gambia’s Upper River Region. Credit:  UNEP/Lisa Murray

“Providing women with the skills and tools for food processing is not just reducing food poverty, but also our dependency on imported foods,” says Jaiteh, noting Gambia imports 85 per cent of its rice. “It also reduces the need for people to cut down trees to supplement their income, leading to healthier forests that in turn help protect communities from climate extremes.” 

Kijera makes a modest profit from her food processing business, helping cover essentials, like food, school fees and medical expenses. The venture also gives her a cushion to weather future storms.  

Although the economic lure of Europe remains, Kijera and her husband are considering other options. “Instead, we were thinking of opening a workshop for him,” she says. 

A closeup of women screwing the lids on jars of chili sauce.
Mangasa Kijera packages cooked chillis at the Nyakoi multi-purpose centre in Gambia’s Upper River Region.  Credit: UNEP/Lisa Murray

At the core of the UNEP-backed project is the idea that ecosystem restoration and nature-based solutions are Gambia’s best defence against the impacts of climate change. ​​Experts have described this natural defence as “ecosystem-based adaptation.”  By drawing on the power of nature, the approach also improves biodiversity.     

To accelerate the expansion of ecosystem-based adaptation, the Global EbA Fund was launched by UNEP and the International Union for Conservation of Nature. It provides seed capital to innovative approaches.  

A medium shot of a woman looking at cashew nuts growing on a tree.
Farmer Bado Bali tends to cashew nut trees growing on her farmland in Gambia’s Upper River Region, an area where increasingly erratic rainfall, flood and drought threaten traditional farming livelihoods.  Credit: UNEP/Lisa Murray

In Gambia’s Barrow Kund Village, youth leader Alagie Barrow has witnessed the devastating effects of climate change firsthand, including saltwater intrusion into rice fields along the river. 

To turn the now-unproductive rice fields into a haven for wildlife, the project helped locals plant mangrove seedlings across 500 hectares of riverbank. Seven years later, the river is sandwiched between lush, verdant banks of green. 

An aerial photograph showing a small river surrounded by young, bright green mangroves.
Youth leader Alagie Barrow witnessed firsthand how climate change caused saltwater intrusion in riverside rice fields near his village of Barrow Kund. Credit: UNEP/Lisa Murray

Barrow says the mangroves have helped reduce temperatures, provided a habitat for fish and countered flooding by stabilizing the soil and reducing erosion.  

Across the country, the UNEP-supported project has rehabilitated over 30,000 hectares of degraded mangroves, forest and savanna. It has also helped farmers plant climate-resilient fruit and nut trees on their land that both buffer against climate impacts and generate income. In total, the project has supported over 45,000 people in building a more resilient future across the country. 

A medium shot showing Mangasa sitting down in her compound preparing food in a large silver pan.
Mangasa Kijera prepares breakfast at her home in Kerewan Nyakoi in Gambia’s Upper River Region. Credit: UNEP/Lisa Murray

​​​“This project is about cultivating a future where Gambians can thrive in their own land,” says Mirey Atallah, Director of UNEP’s Adaptation and Resilience Branch. “Bringing the science of climate scenarios, food production and nature restoration all together, it shows how multiple objectives can be achieved.” 

That’s a sentiment echoed by Jaiteh, from Gambia’s Ministry of Environment. “One of the main impacts of the project is the fact that it has given renewed hope that you can make a living from what was once thought to be not so valuable.” 

 

Visit this page for more information about the project, officially titled Large-scale Ecosystem-based Adaptation in The Gambia: Developing a Climate-resilient Natural Resource-based Economy.

 

The Sectoral Solution to the climate crisis  

UNEP is at the forefront of supporting the Paris Agreement goal of keeping global temperature rise well below 2°C, and aiming for 1.5°C, compared to pre-industrial levels. To do this, UNEP has developed the Sectoral Solutions, a roadmap to reducing emissions across sectors in line with the Paris Agreement commitments and in pursuit of climate stability. Key sectors identified are: energy; industry; agriculture and food; forests and land use; transport; and buildings and cities.       

 

​​​About the Green Climate Fund

As the world’s largest climate fund, the Green Climate Fund (GCF) accelerates transformative climate action in developing countries through a country-owned partnership approach and use of flexible financing solutions and climate investment expertise. UNEP sought accreditation to the GCF to catalyse the use of ecosystem services to achieve a paradigm shift to resilient, green sustainable development.

 

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