In 2024-2025, the ESA Hub's Open Mapping Grants Programme funded 5 organizations across 5 countries to address critical mapping gaps in disaster preparedness, environmental governance, urban planning, and climate resilience. Together they mapped over 209,000 buildings, digitized nearly 2,900 kilometers of roads, and added more than 18,400 amenities to OpenStreetMap, expanding the geographic data available to communities and decision-makers across the region. Beyond the digital work, grantees planted over 500 trees for climate restoration and added 177 place names to improve local geographic representation. The program also generated five foundational hazard risk maps and trained 176 individual contributors across all projects, building lasting local capacity for mapping and community-led data work.
EcoMappers (OSM Rwanda) is a community-led initiative focused on environmental mapping and climate resilience through OpenStreetMap in Rwanda. From April through November 2024, the team mapped buildings, roads, and waterways across the Ngororero and Hindiro sectors—areas prone to landslides and flooding. The Red Cross and Rwanda Mountain Tea are now using this data in their early warning systems for early action and emergency response. Ngororero District Office is using the mapped slopes to identify high-risk areas and plan slope stabilization and tree-planting interventions. The project planted and digitized native trees on the most vulnerable slopes for ongoing monitoring and established a new EcoMappers district chapter so community members can continue this mapping work themselves.

#MapeandoMeuBairro (Mozambique) (Mapping My Neighborhood)** brings together residents and students to map their own communities in Mozambique. The team mapped buildings across flood-affected neighborhoods in the Maputo Metropolitan Area, producing roads and amenities data that planners and University of Lisbon researchers are now using for formal urban planning and infrastructure studies of Maputo's neighborhoods. High-resolution drone orthophotos were uploaded to OpenAerialMap for open access. Students and residents from the mapped neighborhoods were trained in OpenStreetMap tools so they could contribute to and understand the data being created about their own communities.

[Geo-Connect (Zimbabwe)](https://www.geo-connect.org/where-we-work/zimbabwe) ** works on spatial data and local governance. The project mapped buildings, roads, and amenities in Chinhoyi Municipality, and the municipality is now actively using the data for infrastructure management, tax collection based on actual mapped properties, housing regulation, and water and sanitation planning. Residents are referencing the updated maps for navigation, field volunteers have expressed interest in extending the mapping to new developments, and five other municipalities are already seeking to replicate the model.


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