International Waters learning Exchange & Resource Network

Tanganyika - Results

GEF IDS: 398

Ecosystem
Lake

Scale
Regional

Information sources
UNDP Terminal Evaluation (1999)

Key Basin Project Results
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Results data
Regional legal agreements and cooperation frameworks
Year: N/A - Value: YES
The project produced a draft of the Convention on the sustainable management of the Lake which represents a joint effort of senior lawyers, policy makers and key technicians from the riparian countries. As the SAP, the Convention is a participatory effort of the Lake Tanganyika riparian countries. Once signed, the Convention will become a framework for other national legislation concerning Lake Tanganyika environment protection. The country delegates expect that it will lead to other national legislation adjustments. The Convention provisions about environmental impact assessment, public awareness building and public participation in the decision making process, are new in these countries and will probably impact other domains of public life.
The Convention draft produced by the riparian countries delegates after extensive national consultations is another great project achievement.
The Convention will be binding for the riparian states. However, the Lake may be endangered by activities or events that occur in other countries situated in the lake proximity.

Legal component evaluation
The objective to formulate a regional legal framework has been achieved. A Draft Convention has been submitted as a working document for formal political
negotiations, signature, ratification and implementation by the four riparian countries. It is important to note that the Draft Convention reflects international
standard of law-making and, at the same time, is based on a consensus among the four countries.

The Draft Convention has been prepared with the involvement of the national governments of the four riparian states Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo,
Tanzania and Zambia. The national governments through lawyers from various concerned ministries provided the necessary feedback to the drafters. The
present Draft appears to be accepted by the governmental institutions involved in the process. At the 6th Steering Committee Meeting it became clear that these governmental institutions are prepared to mobilize more support for the Draft Convention at the national levels through further consultations with other
concerned ministries and departments. An indicator of such commitment also is the support of the Strategic Action Program which provides for provisional institutional arrangements at the regional level. It can, therefore, be concluded that the governments will do all necessary, so that formal negotiations on the Draft Convention may start very soon.
Regional Management Institutions
Year: N/A - Value: NO
-
National/Local reforms
Year: N/A - Value: NA
According to the declaration of the interviewed countries' delegates, the countries are committed to implementing the SAP according to the guidelines of the
Convention. Implementation of this commitment requires SAP approval by technical ministries and development planning authorities within the countries.
The formal approval would require the signing of the Convention by the respective governments.
The countries' representatives stressed, that although for the time being there is no major direct government investment in realization of the objectives designed by the project, the project only recently started to propose specific actions to implement. In fact, the SAP was proposed for consideration to the Steering Committee less than one month ago. In the meantime, the countries' governments provided the project with requested facilities and detached its staff to participate in the project's launched activities and organized meetings.
In fact, the results of the project's findings show that support of the proposed actions is not only a matter of commitment to ecological ethics or a will to
preserve biodiversity, but the easiest way to assure the habitants of the Lake shores decent living conditions.
Transboundary Diagnostic Analysis: Agreement on transboundary priorities and root causes
Year: N/A - Value: YES
-
Development of Strategic Action Program (SAP)
Year: N/A - Value: NO
In general, the project was very successful in executing the activities that were independent (or almost independent) of the local security conditions. The process of drafting the Strategic Action Program was an example of this efficiency. The preliminary draft of the plan was produced as early as 1996. It was subsequently improved and replaced by one that was extensively discussed in national workshops. In fact, the project provided the national groups (purposely created to discuss the plan) with GEF guidelines and assistance assuring regional coherence of this document. The Lake threats diagnosis, and the protection plan were produced by national technicians and decision makers. Creation of conditions allowing national ownership of the Strategic Action Program is one of
the project's greatest achievements. The Program, however, was drafted and finalized well before the final write-up of the specific studies. As a consequence,
the technical (or scientific) justification of many of the envisaged actions is not as specific as it could be.

Both the TDA, SAP and the Diagnosis are at the stage where they indicate the actions and rank them in priority order. Such a regionally agreed upon inventory
of Lake protection priorities is a great and lasting achievement of the project. It is also an example for other regions facing a similar need to produce a common
international coherent environment protection program. There is, however, a need for the next steps that will assure implementation of the program: endorsement of the priorities by the governments, incorporation of the Plan into the national development and investment programs, preparation of specific
implementation proposals and investment projects2. These actions should be assured after the project termination (According to the initial project's work plan, beginning implementation of these investments should take place before the project termination; however, the implementation delays and difficult
humanitarian situation of the region delayed the project's program implementation.)

GEF IDS: 1017

Ecosystem
Lake

Scale
Regional

Information sources
GEF3 IW Tracking Tool (2010), IWC6 Results Note (2011)

Key Basin Project Results
1. The Lake Tanganyika Authority was established and is functioning successfully with support from the UNDP/GEF Project.
2. The UNDP/GEF project has established sustainable catchment management demonstration sites in three priorityregions in the Lake Tanganyika basin. In the Democratic Republic of Congo three sub-catchments were identified for rehabilitation and 79,899 seedlings have been planted thus far, covering an area of 32 hectares. In Tanzania over 160,000 seedlings were planted, covering an area of 98.5 hectares. In Zambia: 22.5 hectares were planted in community woodlots and an additional 22 hectares on individual woodlots.
3. The project made substantial progress in increasing the number of households that benefit from environmentally friendly alternative income generation activities. In Tanzania 144 Alternative Income Generating Groups were activated,and training was provided on beekeeping and processing of bee-products. In Zambia: 837 households are involved in alternative income generation activities, including beekeeping, vegetable gardening and aquaculture using endemic fish species, with significant increases in average incomes

Results data
Catchment protection measures
Year: N/A - Value: 175 ha
INDICATOR#5 (Pilot/demo projects demonstrate stress reduction measures on priority concerns): Increasing numbers of households in selected catchment areas in DRC (280 farmers participating since September 2010, percentage of total number of households needs to be confirmed), Tanzania (from 0-18% since 2009), and Zambia (from 2-46% since 2009) practicing sustainable forestry management and land use, as well as engaging in alternative Income generating activities to reduce environmental stress.

The UNDP/GEF project has established sustainable catchment management demonstration sites in three priorityregions in the Lake Tanganyika basin. In the Democratic Republic of Congo three sub-catchments were identified for rehabilitation and 79,899 seedlings have been planted thus far, covering an area of 32 hectares. In Tanzania over 160,000 seedlings were planted, covering an area of 98.5 hectares. In Zambia: 22.5 hectares were planted in community woodlots and an additional 22 hectares on individual woodlots.
Establishment of country-specific inter-ministerial committees
Year: N/A - Value: YES
INDICATOR#1 (Effective national inter-ministry coordination): The Lake Tanganyika Authority (LTA) Management Committee (which includes senior members of relevant Ministries in each of the four riparian countries) is fully operational, and a regional meeting is organized at least once every year.
Regional legal agreements and cooperation frameworks
Year: 2008 - Value: YES
Instrument: Convention on the Sustainable Management of Lake Tanganyika
GEF Project:
INDICATOR#3 (Adoption of national and regional legal,policy and institutional reforms that address priority transboundary concerns): The governments of the four riparian countries ratified the Lake Tanganyika Convention in 2008, and the process to develop protocols has been initiated.

INDICATOR#6 (Regional monitoring and management systems contribute to long-term sustainable management): National and international partners have been identified for Regional Integrated Environmental Monitoring Programme, and support provided for water quality monitoring through partnership with UNEP/Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology (NIGLAS).
Regional Management Institutions
Year: 2008 - Value: YES
Body: Lake Tanganyika Authority
GEF Project:
INDICATOR#4 (Newly established transboundary waters institution): Directors of the LTA Secretariat installed in Burundi headquarters office and functioning with support from the four riparian countries and the UNDP/GEF Regional Project Coordination Unit.

Transboundary Diagnostic Analysis: Agreement on transboundary priorities and root causes
Year: N/A - Value: YES
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Development of Strategic Action Program (SAP)
Year: 2000 - Value: YES
INDICATOR#2 (Stakeholder involvement in SAP implementation): Steering Committee and Ministers are involved in Conference of Ministers, local farmers in DRC, Tanzania and Zambia are actively involved in the development and endorsement of land use plans for project demonstration sites; stakeholders in Burundi and Tanzania are actively involved in awareness raising and capacity building relevant to pollution control.