Tanzania flagEnvironment & Sustainability Guide · Tanzania

Environment & Sustainability Guide in Tanzania

Air quality, green spaces, and environmental policies

Tanzania experiences warming trends with temperatures rising 1-3°C projected by 2050s, increased droughts and floods per UNDP and World Bank reports. Forest coverage at 37% supports biodiversity in 42 national parks, but climate impacts threaten agriculture employing 65% of population. Stable air quality lacks detailed AQI data; water access at 59% safe drinking water. Policies target 10% renewables by 2025 and plastic bans.

Air Quality Index

0510
Moderate
6.5/10(AQI: N/A)
Stable trend

Air quality stable per database with N/A current AQI. Limited monitoring shows moderate urban pollution from biomass and vehicles; rural cleaner. NEMC initiatives ongoing but data gaps persist.

Water Quality

0510
Moderate
5.5/10

59% access to safely managed drinking water (JMP 2023); rural 50%, urban 85%. Pollution from agriculture, mining affects major lakes/rivers. Monitoring exists but treatment often required.

Climate change exacerbates scarcity; Lake Victoria contamination high.

Recycling System

Limited formal recycling; informal sector manages plastics/metals in urban areas. No national rate available; focus on waste reduction policies.

Recycling Rate: %

Green Spaces

37% forest cover; 42 national parks protect 25% land including Serengeti, Ngorongoro. Biodiversity hotspot but deforestation at 1.5%/year.

Forest Coverage: 37.0%
National Parks: 42
UNEP-WCMC: 38% terrestrial protection; marine areas growing.

Environmental Policies

Paris Agreement NDC: 10-30% GHG reduction by 2030. Key laws: EMA 2004, Climate Strategy 2021. Plastic ban 2019 effective.

Key Policies:
  • Paris NDC 2021
  • Climate Change Strategy 2021
  • Plastic Carrier Bags Ban 2019
Renewable Energy: 10% electricity from renewables by 2025; hydro, geothermal focus.

Natural Disaster Risk

HIGH

High risk: floods, droughts, cyclones. Recent: 2024 floods displaced 200k+, 2023 drought affected 5M.

floodsdroughtscyclonesearthquakes
Climate Change Impacts: Temperatures rising; 1-3°C by 2050s (World Bank). Droughts up 20%, floods 15% since 2000 (GIZ). Precipitation variable: intense events increase, dry spells more likely. Sea level rise 3-5mm/yr threatens coast. Water availability down 76% projected (RCP scenarios). Recent: severe droughts causing food insecurity (UNDP).

Sustainability Initiatives

Renewable Energy

Scaling Solar Program: 150MW solar added; targets 2GW renewables by 2030 per NDC.

Climate Adaptation Agriculture

NAPA projects: drought-resistant seeds, irrigation for 1M farmers; addresses crop failures.

Reforestation

100M trees planted annually since 2021 to restore forests amid 37% coverage.

Wildlife & Nature

African Wild DogEndangered
Black RhinocerosCritically Endangered
Savanna ElephantEndangered
    Environment & sustainability in Tanzania | NestFainder