Ensuring the future
To ensure that communities can sustain their efforts over the long term, young people, both boys and girls, were trained to map and geo-tag their springs and other natural resources and develop landscape management plans that strike a balance between the needs of the people and the environment.
Altogether, 13,000 people - over a third of whom were women - were trained in GIS and other technologies, together with financial and procurement management.
“The project has given us valuable insights about caring for our environment,” said Mr. Banjop Jyrwa, from Ri-Bhoi district’s Umsarang village, who was trained in GIS technology.
Given the project’s success, the Government of Meghalaya is expanding this approach across the state through its pioneering ‘Green Meghalaya’ initiative. Neighboring states are following suit.
“The project is the first-of-its-kind in India’s natural resource management sector. It shows that adopting a landscape management approach can help conserve and protect valuable natural capital so that current and future generations can enjoy the benefits of a healthy ecosystem,” said Mr. P. Sampath Kumar, the project director.
As the world looks for ways to build resilience to climate change, Meghalaya has shown that addressing landscape challenges comprehensively and using the transformative power of communities can go a long way in restoring a degraded environment, while benefitting communities both socially and economically.