MUNANSI COMMUNITY-LED CLIMATE RESILIENCE AND REGENERATIVE LIVELIHOODS IN UGANDA A Project Proposal by Munansi Green Initiative: 1. Introduction and Background Uganda is increasingly vulnerable to climate change impacts, including erratic rainfall, land degradation, biodiversity loss, food insecurity, and declining rural livelihoods. These challenges disproportionately affect smallholder farmers, youth, and women, who rely heavily on natural resources for survival yet have limited access to climate-resilient technologies, finance, and markets. Munansi Green Initiative presents Munansi Community-Led Climate Resilience and Regenerative Livelihoods, a transformative, community-driven project designed to strengthen climate resilience while creating sustainable and inclusive livelihoods. The project is rooted in regenerative agriculture, nature-based solutions, and youth-led innovation, recognizing communities not as beneficiaries, but as active stewards of ecosystems and drivers of local development. Building on Munansi Green Initiative’s proven grassroots experience in sustainable beekeeping, food and fruit forests, school eco-clubs, and green entrepreneurship, this initiative will scale integrated solutions that restore ecosystems, improve food security, and generate income—particularly for youth and women in rural and peri-urban Uganda. 2. Organizational Profile Munansi Green Initiative is a youth-led organization dedicated to building climate-resilient communities through nature-based solutions, regenerative livelihoods, and environmental education. The organization works closely with farmers, schools, youth groups, women’s associations, and local governments to co-create sustainable solutions tailored to local realities. Key areas of expertise include: • Sustainable apiculture and pollinator conservation (Munansi Hives) • Food and fruit forest establishment • Climate-smart and regenerative agriculture • Youth and women empowerment • Community training and capacity building • Environmental advocacy and climate education Munansi Green Initiative has successfully planted over 40,000 fruit trees, trained more than 1,200 youth and farmers, and empowered 300+ farmers through sustainable beekeeping initiatives, demonstrating the organization’s ability to deliver measurable impact at community level. 3. Problem Statement and Justification Communities targeted by this project face interconnected challenges: • Climate vulnerability: Increasing droughts, floods, and unpredictable seasons threaten food production and incomes. • Environmental degradation: Deforestation, wetland encroachment, and loss of pollinators undermine ecosystem services. • Food insecurity and malnutrition: Limited crop diversity and degraded soils reduce food availability and nutrition. • Youth unemployment and gender inequality: Youth and women lack access to green skills, capital, and markets. • Weak market access: Smallholder producers struggle to add value and access fair markets. Conventional agricultural practices often exacerbate these challenges. There is an urgent need for integrated, regenerative, and community-owned solutions that simultaneously address ecological restoration, livelihood creation, and social inclusion. This project responds directly to that need. 4. Project Goal and Objectives Overall Goal To strengthen climate resilience and create sustainable, regenerative livelihoods for communities in Uganda through nature-based solutions, youth leadership, and inclusive economic empowerment. Specific Objectives 1. To train and support 1,000 farmers and youth in sustainable apiculture, regenerative agriculture, and climate-smart practices over 1–2 years. 2. To scale Munansi Hives by installing modern beehives and improving access to organic inputs and equipment. 3. To establish three school-based eco-clubs with food and fruit forests that serve as learning and nutrition hubs. 4. To pilot a community climate learning hub for youth and women. 5. To promote women’s green entrepreneurship through value addition and cooperative market systems. 6. To establish a community seed bank to preserve indigenous and climate-resilient crop varieties.
5. Project Description and Key Activities 5.1 Core Program Components a) Sustainable Beekeeping (Munansi Hives) • Training in sustainable apiculture and hive management • Distribution of Kenyan Top Bar hives • Introduction of portable honey extraction and processing equipment • Development of value-added products (honey, wax, candles, propolis) b) Food and Fruit Forests & School Eco-Clubs • Establishment of regenerative food and fruit forests in schools • Training students and teachers in agroecology and climate education • Integration of nutrition, biodiversity, and environmental stewardship c) Climate Learning Hub • Community-based space for training, innovation, and peer learning • Focus on youth and women-led climate solutions • Demonstration plots and hands-on learning d) Women’s Green Entrepreneurship • Support for women-led cooperatives • Skills training in value addition and small-scale processing • Market linkages and business mentorship e) Community Seed Bank • Collection and preservation of indigenous seeds • Community governance and inclusive access • Strengthening seed sovereignty and climate adaptation
6. Project Phases and Implementation Plan Phase 1: Community Mobilization & Training • Stakeholder engagement and baseline assessments • Training farmers, youth, and women • Formation of cooperatives and school eco-clubs Phase 2: Program Implementation • Scaling Munansi Hives • Establishing food and fruit forests • Launching climate learning hubs • Providing organic inputs Phase 3: Market Development & Value Addition • Product development and branding • Market access facilitation • Strengthening green enterprises Phase 4: Monitoring, Learning & Scaling • Impact tracking and learning sessions • Community feedback and adaptation • Replication in new communities 7. Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning (MEL) Impact will be measured using both quantitative and qualitative indicators, including: • Number of beneficiaries reached • Trees planted and survival rates • Beehives installed and honey yield • Youth and women trained • Income generated • Biodiversity and pollination indicators Tools and approaches: • Participatory monitoring and community scorecards • Reflection and learning sessions • Bio Vision Agroecological Criteria Tool (ACT) • Regular reporting and documentation 8. Expected Outcomes and Impact • Increased household incomes and diversified livelihoods • Improved food security and nutrition • Restored ecosystems and increased biodiversity • Enhanced youth and women leadership in climate action • Stronger community institutions and cooperatives • Scalable, replicable regenerative development model 9. Alignment with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) This project contributes directly to: • SDG 1 – No Poverty • SDG 2 – Zero Hunger • SDG 4 – Quality Education • SDG 5 – Gender Equality • SDG 8 – Decent Work and Economic Growth • SDG 13 – Climate Action • SDG 15 – Life on Land 10. Sustainability and Long-Term Vision Over the next 5–10 years, Munansi Green Initiative envisions: • A fully operational center for climate education and regenerative agriculture • Policy influence on youth inclusion and sustainable land use • Regional replication through partnerships, cooperatives, and networks • Financial sustainability through green enterprises and value chains
Logical Framework (Logframe) Project Title: Munansi Community-Led Climate Resilience and Regenerative Livelihoods in Uganda Implementing Organization: Munansi Green Initiative Project Duration: 24 months Target Group: Smallholder farmers, youth, women, schools, community cooperatives Overall Goal (Impact) Improved climate resilience, ecosystem health, and sustainable livelihoods for communities in Uganda through regenerative, community-led nature-based solutions. Narrative Summary Objectively Verifiable Indicators (OVIs) Means of Verification (MoV) Assumptions/Risks Climate-resilient communities with restored ecosystems and inclusive green livelihoods • Increased household income among beneficiaries by ≥30% • Improved biodiversity indicators (pollinators, tree cover) • Reduced climate vulnerability at community level • Household surveys • Biodiversity assessments • Project reports • Community scorecards • Stable policy environment • Continued community participation • No extreme climate shocks beyond adaptation capacity
Project Purpose (Outcome) Enhanced adaptive capacity, food security, and income generation for youth, women, and farmers through regenerative agriculture and nature-based enterprises. Narrative Summary OVIs MoV Assumptions/Risks Communities adopt regenerative practices and access sustainable livelihoods • 1,000 youth and farmers applying regenerative practices • ≥70% of trained participants report improved food security • Functional cooperatives and enterprises established • Training records • Adoption surveys • Cooperative registration documents • Participants remain engaged • Market access remains viable
Outputs, Activities, Indicators, and Assumptions Output 1: Sustainable Beekeeping Systems Strengthened (Munansi Hives) Indicators Means of Verification Assumptions • 150+ farmers engaged in sustainable apiculture • 300+ modern beehives installed • Increased honey yield and quality • Training attendance lists • Hive installation records • Production reports • Healthy bee populations • Availability of forage plants Key Activities • Train farmers and youth in sustainable apiculture • Distribute Kenyan Top Bar hives • Provide honey processing and extraction equipment • Train on value addition (honey, wax, candles, propolis) Output 2: Food and Fruit Forests Established in Schools and Communities Indicators Means of Verification Assumptions • 3 school eco-clubs established • 5,000+ fruit and indigenous trees planted • Improved student engagement in climate education • Tree planting records • School reports • Survival rate assessments • School management support • Adequate rainfall Key Activities • Establish school eco-clubs • Design and plant food and fruit forests • Train teachers and students in agroecology • Integrate nutrition and climate education Output 3: Climate Learning Hub for Youth and Women Operational Indicators Means of Verification Assumptions • 1 climate learning hub established • 500 youth and women trained •Demonstration plots operational • Training reports • Hub attendance records • Field monitoring reports • Safe and accessible location • Strong local leadership Key Activities • Establish and equip the climate learning hub • Conduct hands-on training and peer learning sessions • Facilitate youth-led innovation and knowledge exchange Output 4: Women-Led Green Enterprises and Market Access Strengthened Indicators Means of Verification Assumptions • 100+ women supported in green enterprises • Value-added products developed and marketed • Increased income for women participants • Business records • Sales data • Cooperative financial reports • Functional local markets • Access to basic inputs Key Activities • Train women in entrepreneurship and value addition • Support cooperative formation and governance • Facilitate market linkages and branding Output 5: Community Seed Bank Established and Functional Indicators Means of Verification Assumptions • 1 community seed bank established • Indigenous and climate-resilient seeds preserved • Inclusive access mechanisms in place • Seed bank inventory • Governance documents • Community meeting records • Community ownership and trust Key Activities • Identify and collect indigenous seeds • Establish seed storage and governance systems • Train community members in seed management Cross-Cutting Themes • Gender equality and youth leadership • Climate justice and ecosystem restoration • Community ownership and sustainability • Knowledge sharing and policy influence Conclusion Munansi Community-Led Climate Resilience and Regenerative Livelihoods demonstrates how local leadership, regenerative practices, and inclusive economic models can address climate change while improving lives. By supporting this initiative, you will contribute directly to ecosystem restoration, youth and women empowerment, and sustainable development in Uganda, creating impact that endures beyond the project lifecycle.
Submitted by Name: Byaruhanga Crispus Position: Co-Founder, Head of Operations & Research Date: 16th/06/2026 Contact Information Mobile: +256 762 970 965 / +256 394 506 844 WhatsApp: +256 772 086 788 Email: munansigreenrevolution@gmail.com Website: www.munansi.com
━━━ Budget Request ━━━ • Scale a proven community-led model — $10,000 ━━━ Total: $10,000 ━━━
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Munansi Green Initiative
A Uganda-based initiative that empowers youth, women, and farmers to restore ecosystems and improve livelihoods through regenerative agriculture, beekeeping, and climate education. It strengthens food security, biodiversity, and sustainable incomes through community-led action
Empowering communities in Uganda to restore ecosystems, build climate resilience, and create sustainable livelihoods through regenerative agriculture, beekeeping, and climate education.