For the third year running, Ghanaians are turning up in public and private spaces for a mass tree planting exercise in a day for a greener future.
Schools, churches, private and public corporate institutions and
individuals are joining in the national drive to plant 10 million trees in a
day under the Green Ghana initiative.
Without climate action, the urgent quest to salvage nature from
its emergency mode will be a herculean task. Planting trees is an important
exercise as it has become critical to keep global warming below 1.5°C this
century.
When Ghanaians planted 7million trees in the maiden exercise in
2011, the government described the move as “an aggressive national afforestation
and reforestation programme to restore the lost forest cover of Ghana and to
contribute to the global effort to mitigate climate change”.
In the following year, the country exceeded its target by
planting 24million trees.
According to the Forestry Commission, the
over 30 million trees planted in reserve and off-reserve spaces on Green Ghana
Day have 23million of them surviving. This represents 81% and
72% of the trees' survival rate in 2021 and 2022 respectively.
Ultimately, the initiative is to encourage young people to
inculcate the values of planting and nurturing trees while mobilizing national
action for the restoration of degraded landscapes.
As a climate mitigation activity, the Green Ghana initiative
enhances livelihoods for rural communities through their engagement in the
production of tree seedlings, and helps in beautifying communities and the
environment.
The theme for this year is “Our Forests, Our Health”,
highlighting the importance of green environments in the promotion of good
health and sustainability of lives.
According to the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources and the
Forestry Commission, two strategies are devised to encourage Ghanaians to plant
trees.
The first strategy is to plant in degraded forest reserve
compartments across the country.
The second strategy is to plant outside forest reserves; within
farms, along watershed areas, in road medians, compounds of homes, schools,
churches, offices, and within recreational spaces.
The dilemma of mining in forest reserves
Ghana lost over 160,000 hectares of forest from 2010 to
2015, according to Global Forest Watch. The percentage of forest lost
within this period exceeds the quantum of trees cultivated from 1963 to 2016 in
the country’s forest zones.
Restoring the lost forest cover will help to fight climate
change, but Ghana must first save its forest reserves from the devastating
impact of illegal and irresponsible mining.
Illegal mining activities have in
the past decade reached a crescendo that have ravaged lands, forests and water
bodies.
The gains of the Green Ghana Day will therefore be insignificant
without a targeted and committed approach to halting mining in forest reserves.
It is expected that the government’s drive to
aggressively restore degraded lands and depleted forest reserves will be
reciprocated with a similar drive to rid the Ghanaian forests of irresponsible
and illegal mining activities.
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
No comments:
Post a Comment