Abstract:
This report is an output of the Global Framework for Climate Services (GFCS) Adaptation Programme
in Africa. The goal of the report is to describe and assess the current institutional landscape for development and
delivery of climate services in Tanzania and to suggest pathways for leveraging current opportunities, as well as for
addressing current institutional barriers, to enable improved production, access, and use of climate services in
Tanzania. This report is based on a review of relevant policy documents and grey literature, focus group discussions
with communities in Longido and Kiteto Districts, and key informant interviews with selected policy-makers,
authorities, and non-governmental actors at national and district levels involved in the fields of agriculture and food
security, health, and disaster risk reduction and management. The report findings suggest that there are four major
institutional challenges to the delivery of usable climate services across institutional scales in Tanzania: 1) potential
mismatches between national institutional arrangements and legal mandates, 2) limited technical, financial, and human resources, 3) lack of sufficient mechanisms to facilitate systematic flows of information between government agencies, both vertically and horizontally, and 4) limited specialized climate change knowledge and expertise within government structures. Recommendations are made for addressing these challenges.