News & Events

Our Foundation: Bridging Global Vision and Local Reality

At the Elizka Relief Foundation, we don’t believe in the separation of “policy” and “practice.”

As an Accredited Entity and a partner to international agencies, we spend our time in global forums to secure the mandates, resources, and technical support that our home districts require. But our work is defined by what happens when we leave the boardroom and return to the field.

We believe that true resilience is holistic. You cannot heal an ecosystem if you ignore the social fabric, and you cannot build a sustainable economy if you don’t invest in the mental and physical well-being of the youth who will inherit that land. We are building a model for rural prosperity that places environmental health, economic opportunity, and cognitive well-being on equal footing.

Our Approach: How We Create Change

We operate on a simple, three-part loop that turns global policy into local prosperity:

  1. Securing the Mandate (Inputs & Advocacy)

We use our seat at global tables—with UN bodies and international climate funds—not to collect accolades, but to ensure the voices of our communities are actually heard. We translate the concerns of our traditional authorities, local farmers, and youth ambassadors into policy briefs that open the doors for the financing we need. We go global so we can bring resources home.

  1. Healing the Landscape (Integrated Implementation)

This is where the real work happens. We take those resources and apply them directly to the ground. In River Basins, we are moving beyond simple restoration; we are actively reversing the scars of illegal mining. By integrating climate-smart aquaculture, precision agriculture, and mental health support for our youth, we aren’t just farming—we are creating a stable, dignifying future that competes with the precariousness of informal mining.

  1. Building Resilient Futures (Outcomes & Impact)

Our goal is to reach a point where the community is self-sustaining. We are working toward a future where our youth view agribusiness as a career of pride, where our river basins are thriving natural capital, and where our traditional governance structures are empowered to protect the land for the next generation. When we succeed, Elizka is no longer needed—the community becomes the steward.

How Would You Like to Partner?

Policy & Diplomatic Partners [Review Our Advocacy] Read our position papers and see how we are championing rural interests at the UN and beyond.

Researchers & Students [Join Our Field Research] Learn about our “Living Basin” exchange programs and how we share data for impact.

Impact Investors & Donors [Partner in Our Impact] Explore our project pipelines and see where your support can accelerate real-world change.

MASTER ROADMAP: 2026–2027

Global Advocacy & Local Implementation

We operate where policy meets the earth—moving between the world’s major decision-making hubs and our home districts in Ghana. This calendar is our roadmap for turning global commitments into local reality.

Timing Event / Location Nature Strategic Focus
May 31–Jun 3, 2026 GEF 71st Council (Washington) Global Biodiversity financing and integrated programs.
June 2026 HRC Sessions (Geneva) Global Human rights and environmental advocacy.
Jun 29–Jul 2, 2026 GCF Board Meeting B.45 Global Pipeline development and AE accreditation.
Jul 7–16, 2026 HLPF (New York) Global SDG 6 (Water) and ecosystem health.
Aug–Sept 2026 “Living Basin” Field Exchange Local Field immersion in the Pra River Basin.
Sept 2026 UNGA 2026 (New York) Global National commitments and high-level networking.
Sept 28–Oct 3, 2026 IWC 70th Commission (Various) Global Aquatic biodiversity and ocean management.
Oct 2026 UNEP/UN-Habitat Focus (Nairobi) Global Urban-rural linkages and climate resilience.
Oct 19–30, 2026 CBD COP17 Global Global biodiversity targets.
Nov 2026 Paris Peace Forum (Paris) Global Global governance and peacebuilding.
Nov 9–20, 2026 UNFCCC COP31 (Türkiye) Global Climate adaptation and land-use policy.
Nov 2026 UNESCO World Heritage Committee (South Korea) Global Conserving cultural/natural heritage sites.
Nov 2026 (TBD) OPCW/UNIDO Focus (Vienna) Global Industrial safety & aquaculture tech.
Late 2026 River Restoration Summit Local Multi-stakeholder compact for the river.
Q1 2027 Youth Agribusiness Innovation Challenge Local Climate-smart tech and youth-led aquaculture.
Q2 2027 Youth Brain Health & Resilience Forum Local Neuroscience and rural mental care.

 

Why These Hubs Matter to Elizka

Nairobi (UNON): This is the heart of our environmental advocacy. Engaging here with UNEP and UN-Habitat allows us to push the agenda on “Rural-Urban Linkages.” We argue that healthy river basins are the primary defense for urban water security.

Vienna (UNOV): Through the UNIDO (United Nations Industrial Development Organization), we find the technical partners we need to scale our commercial-scale catfish and shrimp processing. This isn’t just about farming; it’s about industrializing rural production in a way that is clean, safe, and efficient.

Geneva (UNOG): We use this space for technical and policy advocacy. Whether it’s the Human Rights Council or other specialized agency meetings, Geneva is where we ensure the legal and social rights of our farming communities are baked into the international climate agenda.

Paris Peace Forum: Our focus here is on the “Stability” angle. We present our work in reclaiming degraded mining lands as a peacebuilding initiative. By giving youth a viable, dignified alternative to illegal mining, we are reducing local conflict and creating long-term stability. Moreover, we are engaging here to position Elizka’s work as a peacebuilding model. By providing youth with stable, dignified careers in agribusiness, we are directly preventing the social conflicts often triggered by environmental degradation and resource competition.

UNESCO: We engage with World Heritage and Biosphere committees to ensure our Ankasa-Tano landscape projects align with global standards for conservation and traditional cultural preservation. This session is critical for our proposed Ankasa-Tano landscape project. UNESCO status—and the standards that come with it—provide the rigorous framework we need to prove that community-led conservation is the most effective way to protect the world’s most sensitive ecological and cultural sites.

Deep Dive: Global Advocacy Strategy

Where we are shaping international policy to benefit local communities.

GCF Board Meeting (B.45): As a GCF Accredited Entity, our attendance is vital. We will be presenting updates on our project pipeline and engaging with NDAs to ensure rural restoration projects receive priority funding.

CBD COP17 & UNFCCC COP31: These are our “Policy Bookends.” We use these forums to advocate for the formal recognition of “Traditional Authority-Led Natural Capital Trusts” as a viable climate solution.

IWC 70th Meeting: We advocate here for the protection of river-to-ocean corridors, ensuring our basin restoration work is recognized as vital to coastal health.

Deep Dive: Local Implementation Strategy

Where we are building tangible solutions on the ground.

“The Living Basin” Field Exchange (Annual Q3): We will host international researchers and partners to document the reality of landscape restoration. This serves as a “proof of concept” for the data we present at global forums.

River Restoration Summit: This is our flagship local event. We will formalize a “Compact for the River” involving traditional leaders (Traditional Council), government ministers, MDAs, Religious Groups, Major Groups and other Stakeholders, etc.

Youth Agribusiness Innovation Challenge (Q1 2027): We move beyond traditional farming training. This event incubates the next generation of agri-tech entrepreneurs who will manage our sustainable shrimp and catfish operations.

Rural Youth Brain Health & Resilience Forum (Q2 2027): We recognize that “Cognitive Resilience” is as important as “Climate Resilience.” This forum brings neuroscientists and local educators together to create a support framework for youth living in degraded landscapes.

Partnering with Elizka

Our calendar is a living document. We are currently coordinating side-events and delegation schedules for the upcoming global forums.

Are you a policy maker? Reach out to join our side-dialogues at COP31 or CBD COP17.

Are you a researcher or investor? Secure your spot for our “Living Basin” Field Exchange or request our GCF-aligned project prospectus.

Contact Our Team & Request Meeting events@elizkafoundation.org