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Senegal Adopts a National Strategy for Strengthened Coastal Governance

Senegal's coastline is under pressure. Coastal erosion, rapid urbanization and ecosystem degradation have long called for a stronger, more coordinated response. With support from the World Bank-financed WACA Project, the Government of Senegal has now taken a decisive step — bringing together government institutions, local authorities, civil society, the private sector and coastal communities around a shared framework for the future of its coast.

The process has delivered three key instruments, validated at the highest level under the leadership of the Ministry of Environment and Ecological Transition: the updated National Integrated Coastal Zone Management Strategy (NICZMS), its Five-Year Action Plan, and the feasibility study for the National Authority for Integrated Coastal Management (ANGIL).

ANGIL is set to become the national body responsible for coordinating integrated coastal management — a permanent institutional home for Senegal's coastal governance, to be established upon adoption of the future Coastal Law. If enacted by 2030, this legislation would fundamentally reshape how Senegal protects, plans and manages its coastline.

These milestones advance Senegal's commitments under the Additional Protocol to the Abidjan Convention on Integrated Coastal Zone Management, translating a regional engagement into concrete national action. For coastal communities, ecosystems and the livelihoods that depend on them, it marks a turning point.

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