A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 28, 2016
Will Sri Lanka Get Green Climate Funding?

By Vositha Wijenayake –June 27, 2016
In an attempt to address the needs of the vulnerable communities in Sri Lanka that are impacted by adverse effects of climate change,
Sri Lanka has submitted a proposal to the Green Climate Fund for
climate finance. The funding requested has as its objective
strengthening resilience of smallholder farmers in the Dry Zone to
climate variability and extreme events through an integrated approach to
water management.
Civil Society Organisations (CSOS) provide that the proposal was
developed through multi-stakeholder involvement, as well as wide
consultation of CSOs and local NGOs and communities at risk and under
pressure due to climate change. It is further noted that the activities
be entirely country driven and reflecting strong ownership of CSOs
representing these vulnerable communities in both conflict-affected and
non-conflict-affected districts in the three provinces.
However the Independent Technical Advisory Panel (ITAP) for the Green
Climate Fund has provided an assessment which highlights concerns for
providing funding to Sri Lanka’s proposal highlighting issues of
sustainability of the project. This is according to the ITAP due to lack
of community agreements on water management, and impacts of the war
which impacted agriculture and the environment of the country.
Ex-ante agreements with communities
ITAP in its review points to the need to have agreements with
communities at the preparation stage of the project for the
implementation of the project. One of the reasons for finding the
project having faults is the non-existence of such agreements.
However it needs to be noted that promising communities that they will
be provided finance to implement activities at the community level prior
to assurance of funding being received only would create a breach of
trust between the applicants for funding and these communities. The CSOs
state that they are extremely confident that the proposal has been
developed in full consultation with local communities and draws from the
experience of communities and CBOs that are prominent in the Dry Zone
in delivering drinking water solutions. They further state that
extensive engagement of the civil society, and CBOs in particular, is
very much a part of the ground work during implementation of community
water supply- a practice which dates back at least 15 years in Sri
Lanka. It is further noted that community owned schemes allow the CBO to
determine the rates which are affordable to each community and how
households pay for the service.