Timeabu, a farming community in the
Ashanti region of Ghana, has in the past experienced levels of devastation of
cocoa trees as a result of bad weather and poor rainfall with adverse impact on
production.
To protect dying cocoa trees and the
local ecology, the Centre for Climate Change and Food Security (CCCFS), a
Ghanaian-based non-governmental organization, has adopted the community to
pilot a tree planting program.
Since December 2017, the Centre has
planted 200 trees on cocoa farms and other areas of the community, in addition
to sensitization on best farming practices.
A beneficiary, Nana Dasebere Boama
Darko, says the farmers are excited the trees will relieve them of severe weather
condition and help provide the needed shade to nourish their crops.
The Centre plans to extend the
exercise to other communities across the country.
“Protecting the ecology is very
important. We are likely to live a shameful life if trees continue to die
everyday,” said Mahmud Mohammed-Nurudeen, Executive Director of CCCFS. “Planting
of the trees is also to sequester carbon, and help remove carbon dioxide from the
air, which cools the earth.”
Despite their importance to life, humans
have cut down half of the world's trees.
“Every year we cut down over 50,000
square miles of forest worldwide for paper, agriculture, building materials and
fuel,” observed Mohammed-Nurudeen.
Several research have proven that carbon
release from deforestation accounts for 25 to 30 percent of the four to five
billion tons of carbon accumulating every year in the atmosphere from human
activities.
Climate Change advocate, Kofi Adu
Domfeh, who is among lead supporters of the tree planting exercise, emphasized the
need to put the trees back “any way we can, as fast as we can”.
“What you may not know is that trees
also build soil and offer energy-saving shade that reduces global warming,” he said.
“We want to create habitat for thousands of different species and also help to
reduce ozone levels.”
The initiative is also supported by
the Economy for the Common Good and senior officers of the Ghana Cocoa Board,
Fuad Mohammed and Asante Abednago, who have committed to the community outreach
to help rural farmers contribute to the government's target of producing one million
tonnes of cocoa.
The CCCFS aims to provide enabling
environment for all species, make issues of food security relevant and tackle
climate change head-on to make Ghana a better place to live.
By 3news.com
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