Belize

Map of Belize

Country Initiatives Details

Community Resilience Building

  • Canada’s Total Climate Finance Contribution: $3,083,181 CAD
    • 2020 to 2021: $710,049 CAD
    • 2019 to 2020: $972,439 CAD
    • 2018 to 2019: $1,400,693 CAD

Targeted Countries: Belize Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Suriname

Funding Period: 2018 to 2019, 2019 to 2020, 2020 to 2021

Financial Instrument: Grant

Type of Support: Adaptation

Delivery Partner(s):

Description

The goal of this project is to increase the community resilience by applying a gender-responsive and ecosystem-based approach to community disaster risk management and climate change adaptation. It assists countries in the Caribbean that are vulnerable to the destabilizing effects of climate change and increasingly confronted with extreme weather events.

The Canadian Red Cross supports local Red Cross societies in implementing gender-responsive and community-based disaster risk management and climate change adaptation tools, with a focus on those most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. The project will scale-up community resilience using existing disaster management planning tools in 20 communities. At the regional and national levels, the project will build on the established relationships between the Red Cross movement, the Caribbean Disaster and Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), and national disaster offices to enhance the gender-sensitive practices of these authorities with regard to resilience and climate change.

For more information, please visit Global Affairs Canada's Project Browser.

Results/Expected Outcomes

The project’s expected outcomes include improved community resilience and enhanced practices of regional and national authorities in resilience, including incorporation of climate change adaptation and gender.

To date, the project’s achieved results include: the elaboration of three community resilience action plans with a disaster risk reduction component are currently underway by respective national societies; 422 community disaster preparedness surveys were conducted in targeted communities in all three communities; and 13 focus group meetings were conducted to determine individual’s understanding of the gender dimensions of natural disasters.

Supporting implementation of the Kigali Amendment on the phase-down of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) (Bilateral projects)

  • Canada’s Total Climate Finance Contribution: $3,323,602 CAD
    • 2020 to 2021: $773,605 CAD
    • 2019 to 2020: $1,268,603 CAD
    • 2018 to 2019: $1,281,394 CAD

Targeted Countries: Bangladesh Belize Chile Colombia Cuba Dominican Republic El Salvador Jamaica Mexico Panama Peru

Funding Period: 2018 to 2019, 2019 to 2020, 2020 to 2021

Financial Instrument: Grant

Type of Support: Mitigation

Delivery Partner(s):

Description

Canada provided bilateral support for the ratification and early implementation of the Kigali Amendment on the phase-down of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) by 11 developing countries (Bangladesh, Belize, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Jamaica, Mexico, Panama and Peru). HFCs are potent greenhouse gases, some of which are 4,000 times more potent than carbon dioxide, and the Kigali Amendment could avoid up to 0.4 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.

This initiative supports investment activities to contribute to the adoption of low-global warming potential alternatives to HFCs in the refrigeration and air-conditioning sector, as well as technical assistance and capacity building activities to enable ratification and implementation of the Kigali Amendment.

Results/Expected Outcomes

The expected outcomes of the project include:
• Elimination of 289,160 tonnes CO2eq of HFCs used annually for the manufacturing of refrigeration equipment in Mexico and the Dominican Republic;
• Ratification of the Kigali Amendment by beneficiary country governments;
• Capacity building for government and industry stakeholders to fully implement the Kigali Amendment once ratified, including through the development of legal and regulatory instruments, raising awareness with respect to the ratification of the Kigali Amendment, the development of national HFC phase-down strategies, and training of stakeholders.