By Bob Aston
Speaking during the opening of the workshop, Knowledge Management and Capacity Building Officer for the LECRD Project Ms. Sheila Mbiru noted that they aim to support Kenya’s efforts to pursue long-term, transformative development as well as accelerate sustainable climate resilient economic growth, while slowing the growth of greenhouse gas emissions.
Mr. Muhindi said that increase in global
average air and ocean temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice, and
rising global average sea level is a clear indication that the media needs to
give climate change coverage more prominence.
The Low Emission and
Climate Resilient Development (LECRD) Project being implemented by the Ministry of Environment, Natural Resources
and Regional Development Authorities (MENRRDA), held a training workshop for journalists on
reporting on El-Nino and its related disasters as a climate change phenomenon.
The two-day workshop was held on November 14-15, 2015 at Lake Naivasha County
Club in Nakuru County.
A total of 40 journalists
drawn from disaster prone areas and hot spots as well as environmental
journalists from across national media houses, learned different strategies on
reporting on El-Nino, related preparedness and risk reduction. They gained
skills on creating awareness on how El-Nino related disasters may affect
communities and coverage of such stories.
Ms. Sheila Mbiru addressing the journalists.PHOTO by Philip Dinga |
Speaking during the opening of the workshop, Knowledge Management and Capacity Building Officer for the LECRD Project Ms. Sheila Mbiru noted that they aim to support Kenya’s efforts to pursue long-term, transformative development as well as accelerate sustainable climate resilient economic growth, while slowing the growth of greenhouse gas emissions.
“We are currently
developing a disaster information portal that will facilitate disaster data and
information sharing. The portal will enable stakeholders and members of the
public to get accurate information related to climate change disaster,” said
Ms. Mbiru.
She said that the
outcomes of the LECRD Project include enhanced national climate change
coordination process, enhanced access to clean and efficient energy systems,
creation of a sustainable greenhouse gas (GHG) emission system, enhanced
national and County Government decision making on climate change intervention,
contributing towards minimizing the impacts of extreme climate change and
capacity building on climate knowledge management.
During the workshop,
journalists noted that the media are a powerful instrument for disaster communication.
By having the media appreciate El-nino and its associated disasters, the media
can play a huge role in educating the public as well as helping in preventing
disasters by playing an active role in disseminating information about mitigation,
preparedness, relief, and recovery.
Mr. James Muhindi from
the Kenya Meteorological Department noted that enhancing how journalists report
on El-nino would not only improve their objectivity but also their knowledge on
climate change and the El-Nino phenomenon itself.
He said that most
journalists have sometimes erred on how they report on El-nino, since some of
the information disseminated through the media is not factual. He noted that
effective reporting on the effects of El-nino and La-nina phenomena and the
early warning systems in Kenya could save many lives during such disasters.
Some of the journalists during group discussions. Photo by Philip Dinga |
“Journalists are critical
stakeholders in the mobilization of disaster response. It is important to avoid
the use of weather and climate only in post-mortem analyses of disasters but
instead focus more on mitigation and preparedness,” said Mr. Muhindi.
He added that climate
change signals are quite apparent in Kenya through rise in temperature,
decreasing rainfall trends, reduced mountain glaciers, frequent flooding, and
prolonged droughts.
Among the areas covered during
the training included: Media as agents of change in the development process;
disaster management cycle; climate change and climate related phenomena with a focus
on El-Nino.
Other areas included
coordination of disaster risk management in Kenya; effective disaster reporting
on El Nino; how journalists can use new media to report on disasters; ethics
and sensitivity in disaster reporting; and safety and security of journalists
in disaster reporting.
The training not only
reinforced capacity building of the climate knowledge management system in
Kenya but also highlighted the important role played by journalists in
reporting on El-nino as a climate change phenomenon including the related
disasters.
The MENRRDA and the Media Council of Kenya jointly organized
the training. Implementation of LECRD Project is by the MENRRDA with funding
support from the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) through United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
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