Ghana’s
Minister of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation (MESTI) has made a
strong case for the protection and restoration of African forests, saying the
forests remain the potent source for sustainable livelihood.
Opening
the 4th AFR100 Annual Partnership Meeting in Accra, Prof. Kwabena
Frimpong Boateng alluded to the forest as housing plants for medicines, food
and providing oxygen to sustain lives.
“Therefore,
anytime we are destroying our forests, let’s remember we are destroying our
pharmacy, our supermarket, and our lungs,” he said.
The
African Forest landscape Restoration Initiative (AFR100) is a Pan-African effort
to bring 100 million hectares of land into restoration by 2030, with the goal
of enhancing food security, increasing climate change resilience and
mitigation, and combating rural poverty.
Ghana,
for instance, made a commitment in 2015 to restore 2 million hectares of degraded
lands.
Prof.
Frimpong Boateng said to achieve such pledges, there is the need to harness
technology in landscapes restoration “because the poverty gap is a technology
gap”.
Engaging Young
People in Restoration
The
meeting brought together leadership from 28 partner countries, restoration
champions, private sector representatives, and technical experts to drive the
agenda of restoration.
The
AFR100 Secretariat at the African Union Development Agency (AUDA-NEPAD) selected
five Youth Ambassadors to represent the Initiative at the meeting.
“AFR100
will never reach its goals without putting young Africans and entrepreneurs at
the core of its work and programmes,” said Mamadou Diakhite, representing the
CEO of AUDA-NEPAD, Dr. Ibrahim Mayaki.
Youth
Ambassador Siyabulela Siya Sokomani is passionate about creating entrepreneurial
opportunities for young African people within the value-chain of restoration.
He
believes the commitments of countries under the AFR100 offer opportunities to
boost entrepreneurial activities among the youth through ecological restoration
business.
“Tree
planting can be mobilized into landscape and should be fashionable, accessible,
profitable and affordable for the youth”, he noted.
Acknowledging
the role of young people in landscape restoration, Minister Frimpong Boateng
said it will be a mistake if the youth are not engaged in restoration.
“The
young people of the world, including in Africa, have dreams they can no longer
afford to postpone, and it is our duty to make sure that dream are fulfilled;
we cannot fail them,” he emphasized.
Ghana’s Forest Plantation Strategy has Young People in Focus
Ghana has lost over 80 percent of
its 1.8million hectares of real forests to illegal mining and logging as well
as unsustainable agricultural activities.
In the past one year, over 26
million seedlings have been planted on about 24,000 hectares of land under the government’s
"Youth in Agriculture and Afforestation Programme”.
Richard
Ebo Quansah has worked with 250 young people to plant 15,000 trees and 3,000
bamboos on a 50 hectare land along the Densu water basin in the Joma community
of the Greater Accra region.
Despite
challenges with the early release of allowances, the youth have remained committed
to the programme implementation.
“The
trees have other benefits that is going to help us and the future generation. The
money is needed now but the trees are needed for the future,” said Richard. “However,
we need the requisite motivation to keep up the momentum of sustaining the
plantation programme’
The Programme seeks to establish 25,000
hectares of forest plantations annually and to restore degraded forest reserves
to help protect the green cover of the country.
Optimism for
AFR100
Wanjira
Mathai, Senior Advisor at the World Resources Institute (WRI), wants more young
people to have the space and support to be involved in innovative environmental
entrepreneurship.
“The
generation that is actually going to deliver a lot of these ambitions that are
being made today are the youth so they must be involved,” she said. “If we
leave them we leave them at our own peril”.
Wanjira
is proud of the commitments by partner countries but looks forward to restoration
action in the next level.
“I’m
optimistic. We didn’t think we would have 113million hectares of commitment
when we asked for 100million, so we can move into implementation because after
all our survival depends on it. We have got to make sure that we are cushioned from
the impacts of climate change that are coming; this is real and for us on the
continent, it is a matter of life and death,” she noted.
By
Kofi Adu Domfeh
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