Ongoing Programs CARE

Climate Adaptaation and Resilience for South Asia Project Overview: CARE Component 1 The Climate Adaptation and Resilience (CARE) for South Asia Project (Component 1) was a World Bank-supported initiative implemented by the Regional Integrated Multi-Hazard Early Warning System for Africa and Asia (RIMES) from July 2020 to August 2025. The project’s core objective was to […]

Climate Adaptaation and Resilience for South Asia

Project Overview: CARE Component 1

The Climate Adaptation and Resilience (CARE) for South Asia Project (Component 1) was a World Bank-supported initiative implemented by the Regional Integrated Multi-Hazard Early Warning System for Africa and Asia (RIMES) from July 2020 to August 2025. The project’s core objective was to foster an enabling environment for climate-resilient policies and investments in South Asia through evidence-based, climate-smart decision-making. It focused on three primary areas: improving access to regional climate information, developing national risk-informed planning tools, and strengthening institutional capacities. While regional in scope, the project concentrated its field-level interventions in Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan.

Technical Achievements and Digital Systems

RIMES utilized a co-development approach to deliver a suite of advanced digital systems designed to bridge the gap between complex climate data and actionable policy in both regional- and national-levels.

  • Resilience Data and Analytics Services (RDAS): A one-stop, open-access regional platform was established to host over 358 national and global datasets. It provides six specialized analytics tools and four predictive tools, allowing users to assess climate trends, agricultural planning insight, and land use & land cover changes analysis across the South Asian region.
  • Operational Decision Support Systems (DSS): The project successfully deployed eight sector-specific DSSs.
    • In Bangladesh: Developed the National Livestock Advisory System (NLAS) for heatwave and livestock disease management, and a DSS for the Flood Forecasting and Warning Center (FFWC).
    • In Nepal: Created “Satark” for multi-hazard alerts (lightning, forest fires, floods), “NAVIGATE” for road safety, and “ADVISE” for provincial agriculture.
    • In Pakistan: Launched “CLIM-PLANNED” for strategic development planning and two “ADVISE” systems for the Balochistan and Punjab agriculture departments.
  • Mobile Integration: To ensure reach, eight mobile applications were developed to complement these web-based systems, enabling field/ground-level access to advisories.

All DSS tools, source codes, and developed mobile applications have been formally handed over to respective government agencies to foster national ownership.

Performance and Institutional Impact

The project significantly exceeded its targets within the agreed results framework.

  • Target Exceedance: User satisfaction for RDAS data access reached 80% (target: 70%), while satisfaction with the developed DSS tools reached 81.6%.
  • Capacity Building: A total of 2,489 government officials were trained in applying climate-resilient standards—reaching 202% of the original target.
  • Regional Reach: The project expanded the delivery of climate advisories to 156 districts across the three focus countries, far surpassing the goal of 30 districts. By July 2025, over 262,000 advisories had been disseminated through the various DSS platforms.

Tangible Community Benefits

The project moved beyond technical outputs to demonstrate real-world economic impacts:

  • Crop Productivity: In Bangladesh, rice farmers more than doubled their harvests by applying improved spacing practices recommended through the systems. In Pakistan, cotton and wheat growers saved approximately PKR 8,000 to 15,000 per acre by using heatwave alerts to optimize irrigation.
  • Livestock Security: Farmers in Bangladesh who used NLAS advisories reported significant reductions in livestock mortality during 43 °C heatwaves, saving animals valued at USD 826-1,240 each.
  • Fisheries: Even though not an original target, fish farmers used early flood warnings to harvest ahead of disasters, securing profits of up to BDT 200,000 from small investments.

To learn more about the CARE project, please visit https://www.careforsouthasia.info/