IFAD Partners Bangladesh on Infrastructure 

IFAD Partners Bangladesh on Infrastructure 

More than 342,000 people in southeast Bangladesh living on coastal chars created by silt deposits will benefit from new financing for a project to reduce poverty and hunger and develop rural livelihoods. People living on chars are often hardest hit by climate change effects like sea-level rise as they often live in poorly constructed housing and on low-lying land that is vulnerable to extreme weather. The US$54.8 million investment would provide the means for a three-year extension of the successful Char Development and Settlement Project – Phase IV. The agreement was signed recently by Gilbert F. Houngbo, President of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), and Nahid Rashid, Additional Secretary and Wing Chief of the Economic Relations Division of the Ministry of Finance.

The project would be financed by IFAD (concessional loan of $20.6 million), the Netherlands (grant of Euro 5 million – approximately $5.7 million), the Government of Bangladesh ($24.7 million), NGO contributions ($3.7 million) and the contributions of beneficiaries themselves ($0.1 million).

Though Bangladesh has graduated to lower middle-income status, more than 24 per cent of the population – or some 40 million people – lives below the poverty line. With two thirds of its territory less than five metres above sea level, Bangladesh is particularly vulnerable to climate change. During the financing period, more than 57,000 poor small and marginal farmer households living on the chars of the Meghna estuary in the Bhola, Chattogram and Noakhali Districts would directly benefit from the project.

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