Shompritee – Towards Locally Led Development for Climate Migrants (ingl.)

Bangladesh ranks as the seventh most climate-vulnerable country, with coastal regions exposed to sea level rise, salinity intrusion, river erosion, and cyclones. These hazards have displaced millions, many of whom face inhumane conditions in urban areas, especially secondary cities.
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Jashore Municipality, Bangladesh
23.1640643
89.20644999999999
Duración del proyecto
2025 - 2027
Financiado por
  • Agencia Suiza para el Desarrollo y la Cooperación COSUDE
  • Lokales Wasser / Max Ditting AG
Project partners
  • Jashore Municipality

These cities struggle to provide essential services – water, healthcare, education, and housing – due to limited coordination, planning, and resources. To better manage climate migrants and support host communities, Shompritee, in collaboration with the municipality, is piloting a Climate-Resilient Municipality (CRM) model that strengthens locally-led planning, service delivery, and governance systems.

The Project

Shompritee – Towards Locally Led Development for Climate Migrants is an 18-month pilot in Jashore, Bangladesh. The project strengthens municipal systems to better plan for and respond to the needs of climate migrants through inclusive, resilient, and gender-responsive governance. By piloting a Climate-Resilient Municipality model, it aims to improve access to health, education, WASH, and livelihoods while generating evidence for national policy adoption and future scale-up.

Shompritee works across three connected areas:

  1. Municipal Governance: Advance gender-responsive and inclusive municipal governance by enhancing coordination and capacity to support participatory planning, including the establishment of structures such as the Local Climate Adaptation Coordination Unit Action Cell (LCAC).
  2. Service Design & Delivery: Co-developing socially inclusive and financially viable service models (e.g., WASH, primary health, livelihood, housing).
  3. Evidence & Policy Influence: Supporting municipalities in mapping climate-induced migration, assessing community vulnerabilities, identifying capacity gaps among government and non-government service providers, and generating evidence to inform municipal action plans aligned with national climate policy frameworks.

Grounded in the principles of Locally Led Development (LLD), the pilot initiative strengthens municipal ownership and accountability, fostering urban growth and enhancing service delivery for city dwellers, including climate migrants. Building on the lessons learned from Jashore, the model is designed for replication in other cities across Bangladesh and the South Asia region. 

By linking municipal innovation with national policy dialogue, the initiative transforms the challenges of climate-induced migration into opportunities for inclusive urban systems, improved public services, and enhanced resilience.