This project is not accepting donations yet. Explore the story, places, and evidence — or follow Concerned Youth Initiative for Climate Action for updates.
Project Story:
Community-Led Biotechnology & Land Restoration Initiative in Gombe State
Our Mission
The Concerned Youth Initiative for Climate Action (CYICA) drives holistic, community-based ecosystem restoration that pairs agricultural biotechnology with aggressive youth mobilization. We believe that halting environmental degradation requires investing directly in the capacity of local communities. By deploying localized, climate-resilient agrifood biotechnology—such as our drought-resistant sorghum varieties—we restore topsoil health while building an active network of youth stewards who treat nature protection as a foundational pillar for regional food security and long-term community resilience.
Background & Problem Statement
Gombe State, situated in North-Eastern Nigeria, is on the frontline of rapid desertification, topsoil erosion, and severe land degradation. Decades of intensifying climate pressures, coupled with unpredictable rainfall patterns, have stripped farming landscapes of their natural moisture retention and nutrient vitality. For local communities reliant on smallholder farming, this ecological collapse results in cascading crop failures, loss of stable livelihoods, and heightened socio-economic vulnerabilities. Without targeted, scientifically grounded interventions to rebuild soil structures, regional food supply chains face structural breakdown, and local populations face displacement.
Solution
Our solution bridges academic botanical science with direct community-led deployment. We counter severe land degradation by scaling localized, climate-resilient sorghum strains—a biotech model that was recognized globally as a winner of the 2025 UN FAO Young Biotech Innovation Challenge in Rome. These specific native varieties are adapted to thrive in water-stressed environments, where their root architectures actively rebuild depleted topsoil organic structures, stabilize soil moisture retention, and reverse desertification trends while guaranteeing predictable food yields for local families.
Opportunity
This project creates an accessible platform for regional agroecological education and youth-led green jobs. By establishing secure, community-managed seed propagation sites in Gombe State, we bridge the gap between complex biotechnology and grassroots implementation. These sites serve as decentralized field schools where smallholders and youth learn real-world land restoration techniques, turning localized climate adaptation into an economic and educational opportunity that fosters collective ownership over regional ecosystems.
How We Regenerate
We engage in targeted landscape regeneration by combining botanical intervention with large-scale digital advocacy networks. Our operational framework uses multi-channel digital mobilization to organize over 10,000 active youth into structured community-led nature stewardship. The funding received from this Ma Earth round will serve as our critical 'unlock' to transition our pilot models into expansive regional seed propagation plots, purchase clean nursery tools, and expand our digital capacity-building workshops to train an additional 2,000 grassroots youth environmental educators.
Tracking Impact
CYICA implements a strict dual qualitative-quantitative monitoring framework. We visually map out our active agricultural restoration plots and seedling survival data directly using the Restor platform, ensuring transparent tracking. Simultaneously, we log community engagement metrics, participant training hours, and socio-economic feedback loops from benefiting families. This decentralized data ecosystem is protected using secure logging protocols rooted in professional cybersecurity standards, providing our international partners with completely verifiable, high-integrity impact metrics.
Our Experience
CYICA has a proven track record of translating climate policy into tangible community impact. Our foundational work in digital mobilization and community-led rewilding has successfully transformed thousands of regional youth into active climate advocates. Our technical capacity is further reinforced by my direct field experience co-leading biodiversity mapping and community reforestation at the Nigerian Montane Forest Project, which successfully planted over 2,500 native trees, achieving measurable canopy expansion.
Our Partnerships
We deliver our interventions alongside highly credible global and institutional references. We collaborate closely with the IBTK Foundation, founded by Hawa Taylor-Kamara Diallo (former Chief of Civil Society Unit, UN DGC), to align our grassroots campaigns with UN CCD international frameworks. Additionally, our botanical research validity and ecological monitoring protocols are supported by academic references from Gombe State University, ensuring our field methodologies remain scientifically rigorous and highly scalable.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.