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June 2025: NamTip hosts Winter School and Final Stakeholder Workshops in Namibia

A series of successful events marked a vibrant June 2025 for the NamTip project, underscoring its strong commitment to research, capacity building, and stakeholder engagement in addressing desertification in Namibia’s rangelands.

The activities began with the NamTip Winter School (16–21 June), held at Okatjikona in the scenic Waterberg Plateau Park. Fourteen Honours and Master’s students from the University of Namibia (UNAM) and the Namibia University of Science and Technology (NUST) took part in an intensive, week-long interdisciplinary program. The program combined theoretical sessions with hands-on field excursions (Fig. 1) and was delivered by NamTip scientists, including several PhD students. The dynamic exchange between lecturers and students created a highly interactive and enriching learning environment. Participants documented their impressions and experiences in an online diary, available here.

group picture of students and lecturers standing outdoors in the sun on top of a termite mount
Photo: Lisa-Maricia Schwarz
Fig 1: Lecturers and participants of the NamTip Winter School during a field excursion

Following the Winter School, the NamTip Final Meeting featured a series of stakeholder-focused events, bringing together researchers, policymakers, farmers, and community representatives. Two regional workshops were held in the Waterberg region (23–24 June):

  • The first workshop, in Okakarara, centered on sustainable rangeland management on freehold farms. It included practical presentations by NamTip researchers, participated discussions on strategies to prevent desertification tipping points, and a joint field visit to the project’s experimental sites.
  • The second workshop, in the communal village of Ozangarangombe, focused on the Ovaherero communal land use system. More than 80 participants—including local farmers and conservancy members—explored locally adapted restoration strategies such as selective bush thinning, rotational split-grazing, and the reintroduction of native forage grasses. This interactive workshop (Fig. 2) was conducted in both English and Otjiherero, and also featured poster presentations by local school learners, supported by NamTip’s implementation partner EduVentures.
researcher walking through audience of farmers showing sample grass species and another researcher presenting a poster with the help of two students
Photo: Anja Linstädter
Fig. 2: Interactive presentations during the NamTip Stakeholder Workshop in Ozangarangombe

The events concluded with a Press Event on 26 June 2025 in Windhoek (Fig. 3). In front of an audience of government officials, scientists, civil society representatives, and media, the NamTip team presented key findings from the project and handed over newly developed factsheets. These provide science-based, actionable recommendations for climate-resilient and sustainable rangeland management in Namibia.

High-level representatives from the University of Potsdam, UNAM, NUST, and members of the NamTip advisory board attended these final events, which were also covered in a press release by the University of Potsdam and featured on social media, including a Facebook post by NUST (see here).

group picture of people standing in front of a screen
Photo: Anja Linstädter
Fig. 3: NamTip project members and some participants at the NamTip Press Event, held on 26 June 2025 in Windhoek