inter-Regional Technical Platform on Water Scarcity (iRTP-WS)

OUBAME-Interregional Project for Poverty Alleviation and Combating Desertification Through Collaborative Watershed Management

OUBAME Leaflet

©FAO

08/03/2019

The Interregional Project for Poverty Alleviation and Combating Desertification through Collaborative Watershed Management is named for the three micro-watersheds where the project is implemented: Oued OUTAT in Morocco, Oued BARBARA in Mauritania and Río MEMBRILLO in Ecuador. All three are already suffering from or are at risk of desertification. As a result of this process, local people are losing their natural capital assets and their living conditions are deteriorating.

The OUBAME project started in June 2010 and is supported by FAO’s Trust Fund Program with the Government of Spain. The two-year pilot phase of the project aims to assess the feasibility of decreasing the negative impacts of desertification on people’s livelihoods, by applying a collaborative and integrated approach to watershed management.

In particular, the OUBAME project seeks to identify ways to break the vicious circle of desertification and land degradation on the one hand, and poverty and food insecurity on the other, by merging indigenous and scientific knowledge and technology; raising awareness of upstream/downstream watershed linkages; building the capacity to deal with watershed management issues among local institutions and technical services; and mobilizing political and financial support at national and regional  level. At each pilot site, the project is analyzing hydrological, forestry and agro-ecological conditions and carrying out livelihoods and local needs assessments.

Finally, a comprehensive and participatory watershed management plan will be designed at each project site for subsequent implementation by local stakeholders and technical agencies.

For more information click here.