Contact UsHelp/FAQIndexSearch 

Home About Countries Data Evaluation Learning News Projects Publications Research Topics
Search   

You are being redirected to this site's new location at:
http://www.worldbank.org/environment

If you can still see this when your web browser finishes loading, you need to enable Javascript on your web browser.

Home > Dev Topics > Environment > Environment in the Regions > Sub-Saharan Africa

About Us
Environmental Themes
Environment Strategy
Environment in the Regions
East Asia and the Pacific
Europe and Central Asia
Latin America and the Caribbean
Middle East and North Africa
South Asia
Sub-Saharan Africa
Mainstreaming
Projects
Analytical and Advisory Assistance
Operational and Safeguard Policies
Capacity Development and Knowledge Sharing
Publications
Partnerships and Initiatives
Who's Who
Site Resources
Ask Us
Print-Friendly Page
Adobe PDF Reader
Email this Page

Regional Website and Strategy
Environment in Sub-Saharan Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa Regional Environment Strategy

Sub-Saharan Africa

In Africa, perhaps more than in any other region, the World Bank's mission of fighting poverty with lasting results is inescapably linked to environmental protection and improved management of renewable natural resources. African livelihoods and national economies rely mainly on agriculture and on extraction of mineral and biological resources, and there are few alternatives or options to compensate when these are lost.

In both rural and urban settings, it is the poor who are most affected by the loss of natural resources and the deterioration of environmental services and who are most at risk from natural disasters that can be aggravated by environmental degradation. Yet the natural resource base is steadily deteriorating, with some of the world's highest rates of soil degradation and with loss of forests, rangelands, wetlands, and fish and wildlife populations.

Millions of rural Africans are dependent on natural resources for food security and meager incomes. An important challenge is the building of capacity in Africa for environmental management. Much of the work done so far has been at the public level, but more effort is needed to involve the private sector and to alert Africans to ways in which successful management of the environment can enhance development progress.

Contact Us | Help/FAQ | Index | Search | WB Home
© 2004 The World Bank Group, All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions. Privacy Policy.