Nature-Led Resilience from the Ground Up
The Rural Development Fund (Kyrgyzstan) has successfully implemented Phase 4 of the Community Development and Knowledge Management for the Satoyama Initiative (COMDEKS), a global programme that promotes community-led conservation and empowerment through the Global Environment Facility (GEF) Small Grants Programme, with support from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
Healthy Pastures, Stronger Futures in Kyrgyzstan
In Kyrgyzstan’s Issyk-Kul region, local communities—working under the guidance of the Rural Development Fund and in close coordination with UNDP—have transformed the COMDEKS strategy into practical action. This collaboration has delivered tangible progress in landscape conservation, strengthened climate resilience, and improved the health of local ecosystems.
The success of the Rural Development Fund extends far beyond Kyrgyzstan’s borders. It demonstrates how meaningful ecosystem restoration can emerge from the ground up when local people are entrusted to lead. In the country’s mountainous landscapes, restoring pastures, protecting forests, and reviving watersheds has never been solely about environmental protection—it has been about empowering communities to build resilience in the face of rapidly intensifying climate impacts.
Keeping the Grasslands Alive
When herders, women’s groups, and village councils work together to restore the land, they also reinforce their own security. Healthier ecosystems help reduce flood risks, stabilize water flows, and safeguard livelihoods. What makes this experience globally significant is its adaptability: the approach is simple enough to replicate, yet flexible enough to succeed across diverse landscapes. It offers compelling evidence that when communities are given the right tools and decision-making power, ecosystem restoration becomes a living process—not just a project on paper—providing an important lesson for climate and land governance efforts worldwide.
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