This project is not accepting donations yet. Explore the story, places, and evidence — or follow Hope for Tomorrow Initiative (HOFTI Centre) for updates.
Project Story
The Niger Delta is one of Africa’s most ecologically rich regions, home to rivers, mangroves, forests, wetlands, and communities whose lives are deeply connected to the land and water. For generations, families in the Niger Delta have depended on farming, fishing, and local ecosystems for survival, identity, and wellbeing. Today, however, climate change, environmental degradation, oil pollution, flooding, erosion, and forced migration are threatening both the environment and the future of local communities.
At Hope for Tomorrow Initiative (HOFTI Centre), we believe that communities already possess knowledge, strength, and resilience, but they need support, education, and opportunities to adapt to rapidly changing environmental realities. Through our project, “An Educational Environment for Community Resilience and Wellbeing in the Niger Delta,” we are creating community led solutions that empower people to protect their environment, strengthen livelihoods, and build climate resilience from the ground up.
Funds raised through this campaign will directly support climate resilience education, community learning hubs, environmental restoration activities, youth leadership development, and local wellbeing initiatives across vulnerable communities in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. This project is inspired by our documentary on climate change, migration, and environmental degradation in the Niger Delta, which highlights the daily struggles and hopes of affected communities. The documentary can be viewed here: https://vimeo.com/1064515032
Our Mission
HOFTI Centre believes in the power of education, community participation, peacebuilding, and environmental stewardship to transform vulnerable communities into resilient and thriving ecosystems. Our mission is to empower young people, women, local leaders, and grassroots communities with the knowledge and tools needed to respond to climate change, environmental degradation, and social challenges in sustainable ways.
We believe resilience begins when communities are equipped to understand their environment, participate in local solutions, and restore their relationship with nature. Through practical training, dialogue, storytelling, and environmental action, this project creates opportunities for communities to become active protectors of their land, water, and future.
Background & Problem Statement
The Niger Delta has experienced decades of environmental destruction caused by oil spills, gas flaring, deforestation, coastal erosion, flooding, and unsustainable environmental practices. Climate change has intensified these challenges, causing more frequent flooding, loss of biodiversity, declining fish populations, damaged farmlands, food insecurity, and displacement of families.
Many young people are forced to migrate because traditional livelihoods such as fishing and farming can no longer sustain households. Women and children are often disproportionately affected by environmental disasters and economic instability. Communities also face limited access to climate education, environmental awareness programs, and sustainable adaptation strategies.
Environmental degradation in the Niger Delta is not only an ecological crisis, it is also a human wellbeing crisis. Communities are experiencing increased poverty, migration pressures, social tensions, and emotional stress linked to the destruction of their environment and livelihoods.
Our Solution
This project will establish an educational and community driven approach to climate resilience and environmental restoration in the Niger Delta. We will train 300 community members, including youth, women, teachers, farmers, fisherfolk, and local leaders, on climate adaptation, disaster preparedness, environmental protection, sustainable livelihoods, and community wellbeing.
The project will establish Community Climate Resilience Learning Hubs that will serve as spaces for environmental education, local dialogue, youth mentorship, and community organizing. These hubs will continue supporting local action long after the project period ends.
We will also organize tree planting campaigns, environmental sanitation activities, climate awareness workshops, documentary screenings, and community storytelling sessions that help people reconnect with their environment and understand the importance of protecting local ecosystems.
Young people will be trained as Community Climate Resilience Ambassadors who will lead peer education, awareness campaigns, and grassroots environmental action across their communities.
Opportunity
Despite the environmental challenges facing the Niger Delta, communities remain resilient and eager to build a better future. This project presents an opportunity to transform local knowledge, youth energy, and community solidarity into long term environmental action.
The Community Climate Resilience Learning Hubs will create accessible spaces where communities can learn practical adaptation skills, exchange indigenous knowledge, and collaborate on environmental solutions. Schools, women groups, youth organizations, and local leaders will participate in activities that strengthen environmental awareness and social cohesion.
The project also creates opportunities for environmental storytelling and advocacy that amplify local voices and experiences. By sharing the realities and resilience of Niger Delta communities, we hope to inspire wider action for climate justice, environmental restoration, and sustainable development.
How We Regenerate
Our approach to regeneration is community centered and holistic. We combine climate education, environmental restoration, peacebuilding, youth empowerment, and community wellbeing to create sustainable local impact.
Our regeneration activities include:
We believe environmental restoration must also restore dignity, hope, wellbeing, and opportunities for vulnerable communities.
Tracking Impact
We are committed to measuring both environmental and community impact throughout the project. Monitoring and evaluation activities will include baseline assessments, participant feedback, training evaluations, community surveys, and environmental monitoring.
We will track:
We also recognize that impact goes beyond numbers. We will collect stories, testimonies, photographs, and community reflections that demonstrate how the project improves confidence, knowledge, wellbeing, and environmental stewardship among participants.
Our Experience
Hope for Tomorrow Initiative (HOFTI Centre) has years of experience working on peacebuilding, environmental sustainability, youth empowerment, civic engagement, and community resilience initiatives across Nigeria and the Niger Delta region.
Led by Dr. Prince Eze, HOFTI Centre has implemented projects focused on climate change awareness, environmental advocacy, peacebuilding, migration, community education, and youth leadership development. The organization works closely with local communities, schools, women groups, grassroots networks, and civil society partners to develop locally driven solutions to environmental and social challenges.
Our team has experience organizing community dialogues, environmental campaigns, resilience training workshops, documentary storytelling initiatives, and youth engagement programs. We are committed to ensuring that communities most affected by environmental degradation are at the center of designing and implementing solutions.
This project builds upon our ongoing work and long term commitment to supporting vulnerable communities in the Niger Delta to become safer, healthier, and more resilient in the face of climate change and environmental degradation.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.