Digging bunds in Kenya
ReforestationCarbonWilderness
1 min read

Rainwater harvesting - bunds

Location

Kenya

Summary

Nature-based solutions are now recognised as a key element of tackling climate change. Justdiggit, restores desertified, dry land using proven techniques including rainwater harvesting (digging bunds, or ‘earth smiles’). All projects are owned and implemented by communities that live off the land.

Who is behind it?

Justdiggit, with offices in Amsterdam and Nairobi, whose mission is to regreen Africa working with millions of farmers and pastoralists across the continent.

Why did we choose this project?

Bringing back nature is vital alongside decarbonising the global economy, if we are to maintain a liveable planet. Africa has a young and growing population as well as fertile soil and ideal growing conditions. Sadly, as temperature rise, more and more land is becoming desertified and unusable without intervention.

What do we most love about it?

We just love the positive, solution-oriented approach of Justdiggit and the holistic, lasting benefits these simple, cost effective and scalable techniques bring to people and the planet.

How does it work?

By breaking open the hard top layer of soil and allowing rainwater to pool and soak into the ground. This one-time intervention ensures less flooding occurs in heavy downpours and less topsoil is washed away. It also enables perennial grass and plant species to return and thrive.

What broader benefits does it bring?

Not only does the project bring local employment, including to Masai women, but it also inspires whole communities to regreen their land, improving livelihoods and water and food resilience. Much of the work is close to national parks and helps provide wildlife corridors for endangered species, by connecting wild and semi wild areas.

How will we know it's working?

Justdiggit takes impact measurement very seriously and outline their methodology and metrics in their impact report. So far over 200,000 water bunds have been dug, capturing millions of cubic metres of water and allowing it soak into the soil, and over 60,000 hectares of dry land is under restoration.

By the way...

According to the Nature Conservancy, 37% of the climate problem can be solved by applying Nature-Based Solutions…

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