Twenty-seven nations across Africa have now committed
to restore 111 million hectares of degraded land as part of the African Forest Landscape
Restoration Initiative (AFR100) and the Bonn Challenge – exceeding the 100-million-hectare
AFR100 target.
In realizing these commitments, countries will spur
climate resilience, economic growth and more.
AFR100
was launched in 2015 in response to the African Union (AU) mandate to bring 100
million hectares of land into restoration by 2030. The initiative is led by the
African Union’s NEPAD Agency in partnership with 27 participating countries, 27
technical and 12 financial partners. Founding partners include NEPAD, the
German Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), World Resources
Institute (WRI), GIZ, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature
(IUCN), and the World Bank.
During
the 3rd Annual AFR100 Partners Meeting in Nairobi this August, member country representatives,
as well as technical and financial partners supporting implementation,
reaffirmed that the initiative is a powerful lever to bring forest landscape
restoration to scale.
“It
is a testament to the continuing political will to restore landscapes across
Africa that the AFR100 partnership has exceeded its 100-million-hectare target
in commitments. We must sustain this momentum and move from pledges to
implementation. There are already many examples of restoration success underway
in African communities from which we can collectively learn, to realize these
commitments,” said Wanjira Mathai, Senior Advisor, WRI and Co-Chair, Global
Restoration Council.
In
the margins of the meeting, two countries pledged to restore a combined 19.6
million hectares of land towards the 100-million-hectare target: Burkina Faso
(5 million hectares) and the Republic of Sudan (14.6 million hectares). These
pledges follow commitments made by Togo (1.4 million hectares) and Tanzania
(5.2 million hectares) in the weeks prior to the meeting.
“Sudan
is delighted to be able to commit to restore 14.6 million hectares of degraded
land as part of AFR100. Restoration in Sudan will support in the reduction of
youth immigration and food security for the poorest communities, as well as
help the country to respond to international commitments,” said Ali Hamid
Osman, Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist for the Sudan Sustainable Natural Resources
Management Project and Sudan’s AFR100 Focal Point.
“The
fight against desertification and land degradation is a major challenge for
Burkina Faso's sustainable development and economic vitality. Our 5-million-hectare
commitment to the AFR100 Initiative will improve food security and create more
robust livelihoods, both of which are conducive to resilient restoration and
productive agro-ecosystems. In our context, special attention and effort should
be given to sustainable employment and entrepreneurship for young people and
women, to provide economic opportunities through the restoration of our lands
and forests,” added Adama Doulkom, Coordinator of the Great Green Wall
Initiative for the Sahara and the Sahel, Burkina Faso.
“Indeed,
of all the Bonn Challenge’s regional platforms, AFR100 is the most successful,
contributing over half of the current global commitment of 170 million
hectares. Ideas can only take root if they are owned and while many have
contributed to this momentum we must recognize the fundamental role that NEPAD
has played in making this an African led and owned initiative, and particularly
the inspiring work of Mamadou Diakhite and his team.” stated Stewart Maginnis,
Global Director, Nature-based Solutions Group, IUCN.
Restoration
is widely understood as a key pathway to meet climate change, desertification, biodiversity
and sustainable development goals in Africa, and to secure vital food, water,
and energy resources.
“In
times of ever-increasing pressure on land, water, and biodiversity, the
restoration of degraded forests and lands is more urgent than ever. Bringing
back trees into the land offers multiple benefits for sustainable development,
the fight against poverty and hunger, for conserving biodiversity and for
adaptation to climate change. Restoration is spectacular in that every $1
invested there is the potential for $27-$35 in return. Seeing communities who
restore their land reap a share of their restoration proceeds, is an honour,”
said Mamadou Diakhite, Sustainable Land and Water Management (SLWM) Team Leader
at the NEPAD Agency, home to the AFR100 Secretariat.
“It
was a great success that the Global Landscapes Forum conference in Nairobi took
place back-to-back with the third annual AFR100 partners meeting at the end of
August there. We have sent a strong signal for the integration of
reforestation, restoration and sustainable rural development. The broad concept
of landscape restoration provides us with strong ideas in the fight against
hunger and poverty through implementing the entire Agenda 2030 – and mainly
SDG2 (zero hunger) and SDG15 (life on land),” said Bernhard Worm, Senior Policy
Officer at the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development
(BMZ).
Participants
of the recent AFR100 meeting also endorsed the motion to have the United Nations
General
Assembly (UNGA) declare a UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration, first proposed in
March 2018 by El Salvador’s Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources –
intended to increase the visibility of and resourcing for countries’
restoration efforts.
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