Carbon sequestration involves the long term storage of carbon
dioxide to mitigate climate change – it has been proposed as a way to slow the
atmospheric accumulation of greenhouse gases, which are released by burning
fossil fuels.
Under the Cocoa Eco-Project, SNV Ghana is partnering the Kuapa Kokoo Farmers Union (KKFU) to create
environmental awareness among cocoa farmers, especially on issues of land
degradation and deforestation.
Farmers in selected production
districts are accessing support to plant trees and engage natural resource
management for efficient and sustainable cocoa production.
Helping the farmers to adapt to climate change is a major
concern, says Frank Okyere, Project Manager at KKFU.
“Even this year the rainfall pattern is changing,” he
observed. “Now for productivity to increase, we need rainfall and the cocoa
plant needs a micro-climate, including trees, to minimize the pest infestation
and everything”.
According to the World Bank, cocoa
farming is one of the dominant land use activities in Ghana with an estimated
cultivation area of over 1.6 million hectares.
Ghana is the second largest producer
of cocoa in the world, but productivity is low, compared with Ivory Coast. Challenges
in production are expected to be exacerbated by climate change.
Climate scientists at the
Colombia-based International Centre for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) have
predicted the rising temperatures will lead to massive declines in cocoa
production cocoa-growing areas in West Africa by 2030.
This
puts at risk an estimated 800,000 farm
households in Ghana that depend on the cocoa sector for their primary
livelihood.
Increasing production demands
expansion of areas under cultivation, with the resultant effect of converting
forests to farming systems which leads to decline in carbon stocks.
The intervention of the Cocoa Eco
Project is to limit the encroachment of cocoa plantations onto forest lands and
conservation of biodiversity.
In the past two years, farmers have been supplied with 34,000
shade tree seedlings in addition to 120,000 cocoa seedlings.
Frank Okyere says the project is beneficial to the
environment and the economic livelihood of farmers.
“It will help them increase their productivity, sell
the trees because they are economic trees and in the wider sense, protect our
environment by absorbing the carbon dioxide so that everybody will benefit,” he
said.
A technical team at SNV Ghana is working with the International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) on climate mitigation activities in
the country.
Charles Brefo-Nimo, Project Manager of the Cocoa
Eco-Project, says there are arrangements to
identify climate hot-spots in the country “so that they can use that to advise
farmers as to areas that they need to take note of”.
There are also programmes to limit the
level of degradation of forests in local communities, by using tools that “help
us to identify cocoa and forest, such that if people are encroaching into a
forest zone, that system will enable us to see and respond”.
Story by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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