{"id":77208,"date":"2022-11-25T07:02:49","date_gmt":"2022-11-25T07:02:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/joblistghana.com\/?p=77208"},"modified":"2022-11-25T07:02:49","modified_gmt":"2022-11-25T07:02:49","slug":"food-and-agriculture-organization-fao-jobs-2022-10","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/joblistghana.com\/food-and-agriculture-organization-fao-jobs-2022-10.html","title":{"rendered":"Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Jobs 2022"},"content":{"rendered":"

Ghana\u2019s agricultural sector alone contributes about one-fifth of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and nearly half its workforce. It is the primary source of livelihood for the majority (approximately 70% of the population), many of whom are found in Ghana\u2019s coastal communities and poorer populations most vulnerable to climate impacts and risks such as coastal erosion, frequent flooding, and storm surges causing displacements, weakening the resilience of ecosystem services and the population.<\/p>\n

Job Description<\/strong><\/p>\n

Job Title: National Climate Change Programme Specialist<\/strong><\/p>\n

Worldwide and in the coastal landscape of Ghana, mangrove ecosystems are tremendously valuable; providing critical ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration, protection from storms, \ufb02oods, erosion, provision of timber and non-timber forest products, processing of waste and nutrient pollution, aquaculture and agriculture support and habitat for aquatic and terrestrial species. Despite their importance, forest and mangrove ecosystems are critically receding worldwide. Deforestation is estimated at 315000 ha\/pa in Ghana. Mangrove areas in Ghana have suffered significant depletion in the last 30 years, falling from 18100 ha to 13700ha\u2014 a 24 % loss. Mangrove loss and degradation reduce ecosystem services such as fish breeding and nursery, erosion control, and deepening exposure of marginalised coastal populations, especially women and the elderly.<\/p>\n

The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the Ministries of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation (MESTI) of Ghana entered into a Technical Cooperation Programme (TCP) to mobilise climate finance from the Green Climate Fund (GCF) to restore degraded mangroves landscape and build the resilience of vulnerable coastal communities to climate impact and risks in Ghana. The TCP\u2019s activities will help to formulate the Concept Note and develop the proposal documents for GCF. It will help to conduct necessary baseline assessments and feasibility studies, \u2013 establishing the veritable climate rationality for the specific climate change adaptation and mitigation for the protection of mangroves and wetlands along the coasts of Greater Accra, Volta, Central and Western Regions of Ghana.<\/p>\n

It will also support mangroves and coastal community vulnerability assessments development of Environmental and social impacts and safeguards. Others include stakeholder consultations at national and project level implementation, including with local people, gender assessment and action planning, as well as meeting requirements of GCF. In addition, TCP activities will be undertaken to mobilise additional funding for the GCF Project\u2019s successful submission and the co-financing required under GCF. The success of the TCP is vital to improving the emission trajectory of Ghana\u2019s AFOLU sector (currently leading the country\u2019s emission at 54.4% (22.92 MtCO2e)) and addressing persistent agriculture, wetland-forestry, fisheries and environment climate drivers and impacts in vulnerable coastal communities.<\/p>\n

The TCP is instrumental leverage to support the country to mobilise the needed climate financing in implementing her Nationally Determined Contributions (GH-NDCs) and contribute to its goal of promoting low-emission and climate-resilient development pathways. Ghana\u2019s first GH-NDCs set out to reduce emissions by 45% (33.28MtCO2e) by 2030. This has now been updated to a more ambitious emission reduction target of 64MtCO2e by 2030, requiring USD15.5 billion in investments to be mobilised from both domestic and international sources, including the Green Climate Fund (GCF), Adaptation Fund (AF) and Global Environmental Facility (GEF) \u2013 all of which FAO is an implementing entity\/partner. This places FAO in a unique position to support Ghana build capacity to access and implement GCF facilities to address climate change emissions and impacts in the forestry and agriculture sector.<\/p>\n

FAO\u2019s role in supporting member countries to mitigate and build resilience to climate change while improving income and food security aligns with Ghana\u2019s resolve to reduce deforestation and forest degradation emissions while enabling carbon stock enhancement through sustainable forest management and forest restoration. It is also necessary to enhance the capacities of sub-national and non-state actors to develop and implement interventions that reverse the increasing GHG emissions in the country\u2019s largest carbon sink, forest areas, and to increase the adaptive capacity and resilience of the rural communities in the forest areas.<\/p>\n

Reporting Lines<\/strong><\/p>\n

Under the overall supervision of the FAO Representative in Ghana and the direct supervision of the National TCP Project Coordinator at the MESTI, the Assistant FAO Representative (AFAOR) in charge of Programmes and the Lead Technical Officer, the Programme Specialist will work with the Ministry of Environment Science Technology and Innovation (MESTI), the FAO country office and the National Technical Working Group in the implementation of the project\u2019s activities.<\/p>\n

Technical Focus<\/strong><\/p>\n

The work of the Climate Change Programme Specialist is expected to contribute directly to the development of the funding proposal to the GCF under the TCP and indirectly to coordinating related activities that inure to mobilising adequate funding for the proposal formulation, all in contribution to the GH-NDCs implementation. The Programme Specialist will work from the Ministry of Environment Science Technology and Innovation (MESTI) and\/or any other ministry and agency as agreed. His\/her work is expected to promote beneficial multi-stakeholder collaboration and country ownership of the project development and implementation.<\/p>\n

Tasks And Responsibilities<\/strong><\/p>\n

Specifically, the Specialist will undertake the following tasks and responsibilities:<\/p>\n