Scaling-up Multi-Hazard Early Warning System and the Use of Climate Information in Georgia: FP068

Project Outline

This project seeks to achieve transformative change in climate risk reduction and management in Georgia through development of a fully-integrated impact-based Multi-hazard Early Warning System (MHEWS). In doing so, it will introduce standardized hazard, risk, and vulnerability assessments and mapping methods and technologies, and provide critical climate risk information to enable the implementation of nationwide risk reduction policies.

Country(ies) Georgia
National Designated Authority (NDA) Deputy Minister of Environment and Natural Resources Protection
Accredited Entity (AE) United Nations Development Programme: UNDP (International)
Executing Entity (EE) Ministry of Environment Protection and Agriculture of Georgia: MoEPA (Public)
Date of Final FP Submission February 5, 2018
Estimated Project Duration 2018-2025
Target Sector Risk Management (Climate)
GCF Financing 27.054 million USD (Grant) Medium
Co-financing
  • MoEPA: 12.368 million USD (Grant) 0.410 million USD (In-kind) 0.600 million USD (Grant)
  • MRDI 7.272 million USD (Grant)
  • City of Tbilisi: 1.000 million USD (Grant)
  • City of Tbilisi: 0.051 million USD (In-kind)
  • SDC: 5.000 million USD (Grant)
  • MIA: 16.538 million USD (Grant)

Project Description

< Major Project Components>

  1. Expansion of hydro-meteorological network, risk zoning, information systems.
  2. Implementation and enhanced use of early warning system and new climate information products.
  3. 3. Implementation and capacity building for community-based climate risk reduction management and interventions.
Project implementation diagram
Project implementation diagram
  • National Environmental Agency (NEA)
  • Environmental Information and Education Center (EIEC)
  • National Food Agency (NFA)
Ref: FP068 Scaling-up Multi-Hazard Early Warning System and the Use of Climate Information in Georgia

Potential Indicators of Key Impacts

Expected total number of direct and indirect beneficiaries, disaggregated by gender (reduced vulnerability or increased resilience):

  1. Direct beneficiaries: 1,710,000 persons (52% of total beneficiaries will be female)
  2. Indirect beneficiaries: 3,710,000 persons (46% of the total population)
  3. Other relevant indicators:
    • Protection of over 3,000 ha of agricultural land and 3,500 properties through structural flood protection measures for a total of $19.4 million, with two thirds benefitting property and one-third benefitting agricultural land.
    • MHEWS established in all 11 major river basins-the entire territory of the country-and necessary institutional/regulatory frameworks for smooth and effective operations in place.
    • Community-based early warning systems (EWSs) are established in 100 high-risk settlements.