• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

fundsforNGOs News

Grants and Resources for Sustainability

  • Subscribe for Free
  • Premium Support
  • Premium Login
  • Premium Sign up
  • Home
  • Funds for NGOs
    • Agriculture, Food and Nutrition
    • Animals and Wildlife
    • Arts and Culture
    • Children
    • Civil Society
    • Community Development
    • COVID
    • Democracy and Good Governance
    • Disability
    • Economic Development
    • Education
    • Employment and Labour
    • Environmental Conservation and Climate Change
    • Family Support
    • Healthcare
    • HIV and AIDS
    • Housing and Shelter
    • Humanitarian Relief
    • Human Rights
    • Human Service
    • Information Technology
    • LGBTQ
    • Livelihood Development
    • Media and Development
    • Narcotics, Drugs and Crime
    • Old Age Care
    • Peace and Conflict Resolution
    • Poverty Alleviation
    • Refugees, Migration and Asylum Seekers
    • Science and Technology
    • Sports and Development
    • Sustainable Development
    • Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
    • Women and Gender
  • Funds for Companies
    • Accounts and Finance
    • Agriculture, Food and Nutrition
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Education
    • Energy
    • Environment and Climate Change
    • Healthcare
    • Innovation
    • Manufacturing
    • Media
    • Research Activities
    • Startups and Early-Stage
    • Sustainable Development
    • Technology
    • Travel and Tourism
    • Women
    • Youth
  • Funds for Individuals
    • All Individuals
    • Artists
    • Disabled Persons
    • LGBTQ Persons
    • PhD Holders
    • Researchers
    • Scientists
    • Students
    • Women
    • Writers
    • Youths
  • Funds in Your Country
    • Funds in Australia
    • Funds in Bangladesh
    • Funds in Belgium
    • Funds in Canada
    • Funds in Switzerland
    • Funds in Cameroon
    • Funds in Germany
    • Funds in the United Kingdom
    • Funds in Ghana
    • Funds in India
    • Funds in Kenya
    • Funds in Lebanon
    • Funds in Malawi
    • Funds in Nigeria
    • Funds in the Netherlands
    • Funds in Tanzania
    • Funds in Uganda
    • Funds in the United States
    • Funds within the United States
      • Funds for US Nonprofits
      • Funds for US Individuals
      • Funds for US Businesses
      • Funds for US Institutions
    • Funds in South Africa
    • Funds in Zambia
    • Funds in Zimbabwe
  • Proposal Writing
    • How to write a Proposal
    • Sample Proposals
      • Agriculture
      • Business & Entrepreneurship
      • Children
      • Climate Change & Diversity
      • Community Development
      • Democracy and Good Governance
      • Disability
      • Disaster & Humanitarian Relief
      • Environment
      • Education
      • Healthcare
      • Housing & Shelter
      • Human Rights
      • Information Technology
      • Livelihood Development
      • Narcotics, Drugs & Crime
      • Nutrition & Food Security
      • Poverty Alleviation
      • Sustainable Develoment
      • Refugee & Asylum Seekers
      • Rural Development
      • Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
      • Women and Gender
  • News
    • Q&A
  • Premium
    • Premium Log-in
    • Premium Webinars
    • Premium Support
  • Contact
    • Submit Your Grant
    • About us
    • FAQ
    • NGOs.AI
You are here: Home / cat / Piloting Kenya’s Nature-Based Solutions Monitoring Framework: Key Lessons from the Chyulu Hills Landscape

Piloting Kenya’s Nature-Based Solutions Monitoring Framework: Key Lessons from the Chyulu Hills Landscape

Dated: January 30, 2026

Kenya’s exceptional biodiversity, spanning forests, rangelands, wetlands and marine ecosystems, is one of the country’s most valuable assets, yet it is under increasing pressure from a complex mix of human and environmental stressors. Rapid population growth, competing land uses, weakly enforced and unharmonized conservation laws, over-exploitation of natural resources, unsustainable recreational activities and accelerating deforestation are steadily degrading ecosystems and the services they provide. Climate change is intensifying these challenges by exacerbating environmental degradation, undermining livelihoods and increasing risks to Kenya’s socio-economic development and ecological resilience. In this context, nature-based solutions (NbS) are emerging as a practical and integrated pathway to address biodiversity loss, climate change and environmental pollution while strengthening human well-being.

Globally, NbS are increasingly recognized as central to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and addressing interconnected challenges such as food and water insecurity, disaster risk and public health threats. However, as NbS gain traction, attention is shifting from simply scaling interventions to ensuring they are well designed, coordinated and effective. Poorly planned or inadequately monitored NbS initiatives risk delivering limited benefits or even causing unintended harm to ecosystems and communities. This has highlighted the need for clear standards, strong coordination mechanisms and robust monitoring and evaluation systems to ensure NbS deliver meaningful and lasting outcomes.

Nature-based solutions now feature prominently in global climate and development strategies. Around two-thirds of countries that are party to the Paris Agreement have included NbS in their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), with many using them primarily as adaptation measures and others integrating them for mitigation. Kenya is firmly aligned with this global shift. The country’s updated NDC commits to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 32 percent by 2030 compared to a business-as-usual scenario, supported by ambitious NbS targets such as restoring 5.1 million hectares of degraded land, increasing forest cover to 10 percent and strengthening protection of critical ecosystems including water towers, wetlands and coastal habitats. These commitments are reinforced by national policy instruments such as the Kenya National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (2019–2030) and the National Adaptation Plan (2015–2030), which emphasize ecosystem restoration, biodiversity conservation and equitable sharing of ecosystem benefits in line with global frameworks like the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.

Despite these strong policy foundations, Kenya has faced a critical gap in implementation: the absence of a harmonized national system with clear indicators and metrics to monitor and evaluate NbS interventions, particularly in agricultural and productive landscapes where most investments occur. This gap limits the country’s ability to generate credible evidence, inform policy improvements, meet national and international reporting obligations and mobilize climate and nature finance at scale. Addressing this challenge requires a comprehensive NbS monitoring and evaluation framework that integrates environmental, social and economic dimensions and is applicable across diverse, climate-vulnerable landscapes.

In response, the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development, through its Climate Change Unit, in collaboration with the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT under the CGIAR Climate Action Science Program, and with support from the Initiative for Climate Action Transparency and the UNEP Copenhagen Climate Centre, has been co-developing a national NbS monitoring and evaluation framework. The framework aims to strengthen Kenya’s ability to track and report NbS impacts, support climate reporting and NDC updates, and generate evidence to guide policies that enhance agricultural productivity, ecosystem resilience and climate adaptation and mitigation. Its development has followed an inclusive and participatory process, engaging county governments, community-based organizations, NGOs, research institutions, academia and private-sector actors through inception workshops and consultations.

The Chyulu Hills landscape was selected as the pilot site to test the framework. Spanning Makueni, Kajiado and Taita Taveta counties, the Chyulu Hills are one of Kenya’s most important dryland water catchments, supplying key springs and contributing over 30 percent of Mombasa’s water. Anchored by Chyulu Hills National Park and ecologically connected to Amboseli and Tsavo National Parks, the area supports significant wildlife populations, including elephants and black rhinos, while sustaining agro-pastoralist communities that depend on grazing land, forests and water resources. At the same time, the landscape faces mounting pressures from land degradation, forest loss, soil erosion, invasive species, agricultural expansion and illegal logging and charcoal production. This combination of high ecological value and accelerating degradation made the Chyulu Hills an ideal setting for piloting NbS monitoring tools.

The pilot aimed to test whether the proposed indicators and methods were practical, measurable and relevant in a complex, multi-use landscape. It built on existing initiatives such as the Chyulu Hills REDD+ Project and the TWENDE climate adaptation project, allowing assessment of the framework across different ecological and socio-economic contexts. Implementation focused on selected wards in Kajiado South and Makueni counties, with data collection carried out in close collaboration with county officials, local administrators and community leaders to ensure access, coordination and meaningful community engagement.

A structured data collection process was followed, beginning with comprehensive training for enumerators to ensure consistency and data quality. Household surveys captured information on socio-economic characteristics, land and crop management, livestock systems, water and pasture management, engagement in nature-based enterprises and perceived climate and ecosystem impacts. Focus group discussions explored community-level practices, awareness and adoption of NbS, climate risks and governance arrangements, while key informant interviews with government agencies, NGOs, research institutions and community organizations provided insights into drivers of degradation, restoration efforts, institutional roles and enforcement challenges.

Findings from the pilot revealed that NbS are already deeply embedded in local livelihood systems through practices such as soil and water conservation, agroforestry, pasture management and ecosystem-based enterprises like beekeeping and tree nurseries. Communities clearly recognize the link between healthy ecosystems and their livelihoods, particularly in relation to water availability and grazing resources. However, many NbS activities remain fragmented, small-scale and poorly documented, underscoring the need for a harmonized framework to systematically track adoption, performance and impact.

Ecological findings confirmed widespread pressure on land and natural resources, especially during dry seasons, validating the framework’s emphasis on indicators related to land condition, vegetation cover, soil and water conservation and ecosystem services. Socio-economic analysis showed that NbS contribute to livelihoods and income diversification, but returns are often modest and vulnerable to climate shocks, highlighting the importance of tracking resilience, food security and benefit-sharing, particularly for women and youth. Governance-related findings emphasized the critical role of community institutions, county governments and local leadership in enabling successful NbS implementation, while also revealing ongoing challenges related to enforcement, coordination and resource-use conflicts.

Overall, piloting the NbS monitoring and evaluation framework in the Chyulu Hills demonstrated its capacity to capture the interconnected ecological, social, economic and governance dimensions of nature-based solutions in a practical and usable way. The exercise highlighted the persistent gap between widespread NbS implementation and systematic impact measurement, a gap the framework is designed to bridge by linking local action to national and international accountability processes, including NDC and biennial transparency reporting. With lessons from the pilot now informing further refinement, Kenya is well positioned to move from fragmented NbS efforts toward a coherent, nationally anchored system for tracking, learning and scaling impact.

Related Posts

  • Five Key Lessons from Viet Nam’s National Adaptation Plan Mid-Term Evaluation
  • Paris Climate Agreement at Risk: US Exit Threatens Global Climate Goals
  • Why Menstrual Health and Sanitation Markets Are Key to the Climate Economy
  • Climate Shocks, Gender Gaps, and Finance: Lessons from Women-Led Enterprises in Nepal
  • Advancing Women’s Leadership in Water Management with BRIDGE Gender Grants

Primary Sidebar

Latest News

Cholera Surge Hits Southern Africa Amid Floods and Displacement

Strengthening Water Safety in Morogoro: Tanzania’s Latest Initiative

Angola and Namibia Launch Synchronized Polio Campaign Along Border

WHO Launches Strategy Game to Boost Outbreak Response Speed

Strengthening Traditional Medicine: WHO Launches New Collaborating Centre

Strengthening Malaria Elimination in Africa Through Localized Data

Stemming the Tide of Digital Scams: A Development Priority

IUCN NAbSA Launches Brief Series to Boost Nature-Based Climate Solutions

Stronger Together for Peace: Building Unity and Global Harmony

Ukraine Receives Historic €1.5 Billion from EIB Group in 2025

Overnight Care Service to End Amid Budget Reductions

Canada Invests $41M in Cancer Prevention and Early Detection Research

Empowering Communities: Small Grants Initiative Expands to Solomon Islands

London Cancer Hub Fund Launched by Aviva to Drive Cancer Innovation

Greek Law Targeting NGOs Sparks International Criticism

Gender Persecution and War Crimes in Afghanistan Demand Justice

US Energy Dominance Agenda Shapes Indonesia Trade Deal

Cambodian Journalists Sentenced to 14 Years in Controversial Case

Call for Accountability in Lebanon: War Crimes Victims Demand Justice

Israel Faces Global Criticism Over West Bank Annexation Measures

Greece Convicts Officials in ‘Predatorgate’ Spyware Abuse Scandal

1.6 Billion Fentanyl Doses Prevented in UN Drug Alert

Deadly Border Clashes Between Afghanistan and Pakistan: UN Urges Talks

Sudan Faces Ongoing Threat of Genocidal Violence, UN Warns

Energy Crisis in Cuba Intensifies Humanitarian Pressures

£50 Million Boost in Funding to Fight Homelessness

Global Accelerator Showcases Results from 19 Pathfinder Countries

Transforming Rwanda’s Food Systems: Policies, Innovation, and Impact

Brazil Floods 2026: Thousands Displaced as IOM Mobilizes Humanitarian Support

LGBTI Rights Under Threat Across Europe

OCHA Funds Bring Clean Water to Displaced Communities in North Darfur

How UN Peacekeeping Supports Women’s Access to Justice: 5 Key Ways

Mars Launches Mars Impact Fund to Support People, Pets, and Communities

Six Months After Afghanistan Earthquake, Families Face Abandonment

Community Organisations Can Access £1.5M+ in Funding

Nearly £400,000 in Community Funding Now Available

India Requires $750M Funding to Build 100 Non-Profit Unicorns

Bent Arrow Receives Alstom Foundation Funding for Workforce Program

AfDB and Tunisia Strengthen Oversight of Development Project Finances

IDB-Backed Program to Improve Peru’s Identity and Registry Services

Funds for NGOs
Funds for Companies
Funds for Media
Funds for Individuals
Sample Proposals

Contact us
Submit a Grant
Advertise, Guest Posting & Backlinks
Fight Fraud against NGOs
About us

Terms of Use
Third-Party Links & Ads
Disclaimers
Copyright Policy
General
Privacy Policy

Premium Sign in
Premium Sign up
Premium Customer Support
Premium Terms of Service

©FUNDSFORNGOS LLC.   fundsforngos.org, fundsforngos.ai, and fundsforngospremium.com domains and their subdomains are the property of FUNDSFORNGOS, LLC 1018, 1060 Broadway, Albany, New York, NY 12204, United States.   Unless otherwise specified, this website is not affiliated with the abovementioned organizations. The material provided here is solely for informational purposes and without any warranty. Visitors are advised to use it at their discretion. Read the full disclaimer here. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy.