logo
Vanuatu Communities Growing Climate Resilience

Vanuatu Communities Growing Climate Resilience

Scoop28-04-2025

Article – RNZ
Communities in Vanuatu are learning to grow climate resilient crops, 18 months after Cyclone Lola devastated the country. Koroi Hawkins, RNZ Pacific Editor
, RNZ Pacific Bulletin Editor
Communities in Vanuatu are learning to grow climate resilient crops, 18 months after Cyclone Lola devastated the country.
The category 5 storm struck in October 2023, generating wind speeds of up to 215 kilometres per hour, which destroyed homes, schools, plantations, and left at least four people dead.
It was all the worse for following twin cyclones Judy and Kevin earlier that year.
Save the Children Vanuatu country director Polly Banks said they have been working alongside Vanuatu's Ministry of Agriculture and local partners, supporting families through the Tropical Cyclone Lola Recovery Programme.
'It really affected backyard gardening and the communities across the areas affected – their ability to pursue an income and also their own nutritional needs,' she said.
She said the programme looked at the impact of the cyclone on backyard gardening and on people's economic reliance on what they grow in their gardens, and developed a recovery plan to respond.
'We trained community members and also provided them with the equipment to establish cyclone resilient nurseries.
'So for example, nurseries that can be put up and then pulled down when a harsh weather event – including cyclones but even heavy rainfall – is arriving.
'There was a focus on these climate resilient nurseries, but also through that partnership with the Department of Agriculture, there was also a much stronger focus than we've had before on teaching community members climate smart agricultural techniques.'
Banks said these techniques included open pollinating seed and learning skills such as grassing; and another part of the project was introducing more variety into people's diets.
She said out of the project has also come the first seed bank on Epi Island.
'That seed bank now has a ready supply of seeds, and the community are adding to that regularly, and they're taking those seeds from really climate-resilient crops, so that they have a cyclone secure storage facility,' she said.
'The next time a cyclone happens – and we know that they're going to become more ferocious and more frequent – the community are ready to replant the moment that the cyclone passes.
'But in setting the seed bank up as well, the community have been taught how to select the most productive seeds, the seeds that show the most promise; how to dry them out; how to preserve them.'
Banks said they are also working with the Department of Agriculture in the delivery of a community-based climate resilience project, which is funded by the Green Climate Fund.
Rolled out across 282 communities across the country, a key focus of it is the creation of more climate-resilient backyard gardening, food preservation and climate resilient nurseries.
'We're also setting up early warning systems through the provision of internet to really remote communities so that they have better access to more knowledge about when a big storm or a cyclone is approaching and what steps to take.
'But that particular project is still just a drop in the ocean in terms of the adaptation needs that communities have.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sinkhole opens on major Christchurch road
Sinkhole opens on major Christchurch road

RNZ News

time3 days ago

  • RNZ News

Sinkhole opens on major Christchurch road

Photo: Supplied A sinkhole has opened up on Fendalton Road - a major thoroughfare in Christchurch. It's believed a car was in the sinkhole for several hours. The water supply has been cut in the area for the next few hours. A worker cordons off the sinkhole. Photo: Supplied The sinkhole is near the St Barnabas Church which is a prominent landmark in the city. An RNZ reporter says there is a lot of traffic buildup in the Fendalton suburb. The city was hit by heavy rain on Thursday. More to come...

Light earthquake in Wellington region
Light earthquake in Wellington region

RNZ News

time3 days ago

  • RNZ News

Light earthquake in Wellington region

Hundreds of people reported feeling the light quake. Photo: RNZ / Alison Ballance A magnitude 3.6 earthquake has struck the Wellington region. Geonet says the light earthquake occurred at 6.14pm and was at a depth of 21km and centred 15km west of Martinborough. By 6.20pm more than 1500 people had reported feeling it. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Australia, Pacific rocked by ocean heatwaves last year
Australia, Pacific rocked by ocean heatwaves last year

1News

time4 days ago

  • 1News

Australia, Pacific rocked by ocean heatwaves last year

Ocean temperatures in the south-west Pacific reached fresh highs last year as heatwaves struck more than 10% of the world's marine waters. Long stints of extreme ocean heat were experienced by nearly 40 million square kilometres of the region in 2024, including the waters surrounding Australia, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has revealed. WMO secretary-general Celeste Saulo said ocean heat and acidification were together inflicting long-lasting damage on marine ecosystems and economies "It is increasingly evident that we are fast running out of time to turn the tide," she said. High ocean temperatures have been wreaking havoc on heat-sensitive coral reefs worldwide, with Australian authorities reporting the sixth mass bleaching event at the Great Barrier Reef in less than a decade. ADVERTISEMENT Warming on land was also higher than it had ever been last year, with Thursday's report from the United Nations weather and climate agency identifying temperatures roughly 0.48°C above the 1991–2020 average across the region. Heatwaves were particularly acute in Western Australia, with the coastal town of Carnarvon reaching 49.9°C in February and breaking existing temperature records by more than two degrees. The south-west Pacific assessment aligns with global temperature records being consistently broken as concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere reach fresh highs. Last year was the hottest on record and the first to surpass 1.5°C warmer than pre-industrial times, the benchmark temperature under the Paris climate agreement. The global pact has not yet been breached as it refers to long-term trends but more warming is expected, with a separate WMO report predicting a 70% chance the average temperature over the next five years will exceed 1.5 degrees. The WMO regional report pre-dated Cyclone Alfred and the devastating flooding events Australia experienced in the first half of 2025, but captured above-average rainfall for the northern states last year. A sea level rise in the Pacific region that exceeds global averages was also recorded, threatening island communities living near the coast. ADVERTISEMENT Elsewhere in the region, Indonesia's glacier ice degraded 30-50% compared to 2022. If melting continues at the same rate, the ice is on track to disappear entirely by 2026 or soon after. The Philippines was struck by twice as many cyclones as normal, with 12 storms hitting the country between September and November. Climate patterns also influenced the year's weather events, including El Nino conditions at the start of 2024 in the tropical Pacific Ocean that weakened to neutral conditions by the middle of the year. Head of the federal Climate Change Authority Matt Kean said there was still "time to arrest this direction of travel to a hothouse destination" at an event in Sydney on Wednesday. "First, we should ignore the doubters whose main mission seems to be to prolong the life of fossil fuel industries," he said while delivering the Talbot Oration at the Australian Museum.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store