The UK has launched a Climate Changemakers photography competition to spur Kenyan voices to share what climate change means to them.
The UK is stepping up to drive climate action
in Kenya, British High Commissioner Jane Marriott announced today. During a
visit to Lake Baringo, she reaffirmed that the UK is doubling its commitment to
providing international climate finance by KES 1.7 trillion over the next 5
years.
During the visit, High Commissioner Jane
Marriott met with businesses, schools and community leaders affected by the
rise of Lake Baringo. The lake has risen by over 42 inches since May, impacting
jobs, education and health services. The UK is committed to tackling climate
change in Kenya, and the related issues that have driven the flooding.
As shown by Lake Baringo, the impacts of
climate change are being felt all over Kenya, but these effects are felt the
most by the communities directly impacted. Next year the UK will host the
global climate change talks, and today Ms Marriott launched a new initiative
inviting Kenyans to submit their photographs depicting how climate change is
affecting the country.
Photographs can portray the very real
challenges people face in Kenya. Winning photographs will cover the following
categories: nature based solutions to climate change, climate technology and
innovation, and adapting to climate change in the community.
Speaking on the shores of Lake Baringo,
British High Commissioner to Kenya Jane Marriott said:
Climate change is already a daily reality for
people across Kenya. Vulnerable communities that rely on their natural
environment for survival are most at risk, least able to prepare and hardest
hit. The UK will provide a platform for Kenyan voices and experiences in the
run up to the climate change conference next year in the UK, to build a
brighter, greener, future.
Vice President of the World Resources
Institute and Friend of COP26 Wanjira Mathai said:
Without support to locally led measures to
adapt to climate impacts and increase the resilience of economic activities,
communities will sink further into poverty and hopelessness. The need for
urgent climate action is clear. We need to re-set our relationship with nature
and through our collective action reverse the damage we have done to mother
earth.
The initiative comes during a Year of Climate
Action in Kenya, a partnership to celebrate the leadership that Kenya has shown
in areas such as climate policy, clean energy, and green finance.
Edouard Wenseleers, Globeleq’s Business
Development Director for East Africa said:
Globeleq’s mission is to power Africa’s
growth. As a responsible investor and power producer, Globeleq is committed to
grow its business in a manner that is sustainable and respectful of the
environment and the communities. Our Malindi Solar project in Kenya is a
testimony of that commitment and we are delighted to sponsor the ‘Climate
Changemakers Photography Competition’ launched by the British High Commission
in Nairobi.
Last month, the UK announced a KES 1.2 billion
(£8m) package of UK initiatives to support climate action in Kenya and Africa.
The UK is also backing new pioneering
satellite projects that will apply British expertise to tackling development
problems in Kenya. UK academics will work on data solutions to manage natural
resources and protecting wildlife. In Kenya, these projects will protect
biodiversity, and increase climate change resilience:
Sat4Wildlife - to protect wildlife habitats in
Kenya, using innovative sensing and monitoring technologies to boost the
capacity of conservationists, including Ol Pejeta Conservancy to tackle threats
to people and wildlife.
gEOthermalKenya - working with Kenya’s
National Environmental Management Authority to support the sustainable growth
of the geothermal sector, through a combination of satellite data insights and
community consultations
Earth Observation for Sustainable Aggregate
Supply - supporting sustainable management of sand resources
The competition is open from Friday, 4
December 2020 and will close at midnight Sunday, 31 January 2021. Winners will
be notified on Wangari Maathai Day on 3 March 2021
Notes to editors:
The photography competition, sponsored by
Globeleq, will see up to three Kenyans win KES 200,000 each and a chance to
visit and photograph the Globeleq Malindi Solar project once in operation
Winners will be selected by a panel comprising
of the British High Commissioner to Kenya, Jane Marriott, the Principal
Secretary Ministry of Environment and Forestry Dr. Chris Kiptoo, Vice President
and Regional Director for Africa, World Resources Institute, Wanjira Mathai and
a representative from the competition sponsor, Globeleq
The Terms and Conditions can be found
here ODT19.9KB
The recent 1.2 billion KES package of UK
support to tackle climate change in Africa includes:
The UK PACT Green Recovery Challenge Fund
programme to Kenya and other countries with KES 770 million (£5.3m) available
to support low-carbon transitions through clean energy and nature-based
solutions;
A new UK funded partnership between Cambridge
University, the Eastern & Southern African Management Institute, the
International Institute for Environment and Development and FSD Africa to build
capacity to access climate finance across Africa;
UK support to the FlipFlopi Project, in
partnership with UNEP, to combat plastic waste and water pollution in Kenya and
Lake Victoria, and work by BBC Media Action to train and mentor journalists to
report on pollution issues and local solutions including recycling
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