Friday 29 September 2017

The Forestry Commission Of Ghana Must End Partnerships With Rogue Timber Companies Corrupting District-Level Forestry Officials

Many nations across the globe have adopted low-carbon development initiatives as a demonstration of their commitment to the 2030 U.N. Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs).

There also is commensurate funding available for African nations to restore their degraded forests.

The question is: Instead of continuing to see the dishonest timber companies - which regularly  utilise documentation covering single logs to cover many as their lucrative  business model and who are responsible for corrupting so many district-level Forestry Commission officials  - as their partners, why does the Forestry Commission of Ghana not instead look to partnering with local and  overseas environmental NGOs to ensure a sustainable future for itself and for  fringe-forest communities across Ghana?

For the benefit of our blog's many brilliant young readers, as well as  Ghana's mostly poorly-resourced environmental NGOs and the corruption-riddled district-level Forestry Commission offices and those at the national head office in Accra, we are posting an insigtful email we recieved from the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative (AFR100) Please read on:

"Africa takes action to advance landscape restoration goals

Niamey, Niger – September 29, 2017

This week, representatives from 24 countries across Africa reaffirmed the continent’s commitment to bringing degraded landscapes and livelihoods back to life. At a meeting in Niger, partners of the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative (AFR100) exchanged their experiences using forest landscape restoration practices to achieve their national environmental and sustainable development goals.

AFR100 is a Pan-African country-led initiative that aims to bring 100 million hectares of degraded land into restoration by 2030. To date, countries have already committed more than 80 million hectares. On September 26-27, participating countries analyzed how to go from commitment to action and shared practical ways to work with the communities to initiate restoration on the ground.

The country hosting this year’s meeting, Niger, has already successfully restored 5 million hectares using farmer-managed natural regeneration. “Restoration is a key issue for the resilience of our communities,” said Niger’s Minister of Environment and Sustainable Development, Almoustapha Garba. “The Bonn Challenge, focused on Africa through AFR100, is very ambitious but achievable. The attitude in Niger is that this is hard but not impossible.”

The forest landscape restoration approach driving AFR100 goes beyond protecting nature and focuses on people. For Africa, restoring landscapes is an opportunity to generate income, improve livelihoods, strengthen food security and build resilience, especially against the effects of climate change seen in the Sahel.

“The enthusiasm from countries comes from the fact that we are moving from the designing of restoration to actual implementation and execution on the ground,” expressed Mamadou Diakhite, Team Leader at the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) Planning and Coordinating Agency, which hosts the AFR100 secretariat. “There will be shovels to dig the ground, plant the trees and restore the land. This is the engine for the countries.”

Africa leads the way

The ambitious commitment of AFR100 partner countries makes Africa a global leader in restoring forests, landscapes and livelihoods. In addition to feeding into domestic restoration and sustainable development commitments, AFR100 contributes to the achievement of global initiatives such as the Bonn Challenge, the Sustainable Development Goals and the New York Declaration on Forests. It also complements regional initiatives such as the African Resilient Landscapes Initiative (ARLI), the African Landscapes Action Plan (ALAP) and the Great Green Wall Initiative (GGWI). The AFR100 initiative was announced during the Global Landscapes Forum at the Conference of Parties (COP21) in Paris, where forest landscape restoration was highlighted as a key ingredient of the global movement to adapt to and mitigate climate change.

“In 2011 the Minister of Environment started the Bonn Challenge, with a global aspiration to restore 150 million hectares by 2020,” explained Horst Freiberg, Head of Division at Germany’s Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety. “The AFR100 initiative is a reaction to support and implement this global goal on a regional level.”

“Our two ministries, basically, work hand in hand to make AFR100 the implementation platform of the Bonn Challenge in Africa,” added Bernhard Worm, Senior Advisor at Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ).

At this week’s meeting, AFR100 partners reviewed guidelines and frameworks to track progress towards their shared goal and to capture and share best practices. They also encouraged other African countries to make restoration commitments and join the initiative.

ABOUT AFR100:

AFR100 (the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative) is a country-led effort to bring 100 million hectares of degraded land across Africa into restoration by 2030. AFR100 contributes to the Bonn Challenge, the African Resilient Landscapes Initiative (ARLI), the African Union Agenda 2063, the Sustainable Development Goals and other targets.

KEY FIGURES:

24 partner countries have committed more than 80 million hectares.

9 financial partners have committed more than USD $1.5 billion.

18 technical partners are providing assistance.

INTERVIEW OPPORTUNITIES:

Mamadou Diakhite, NEPAD Agency.

Kitty van de Heijden, World Resources Institute.

Peter Ndunda, World Resources Institute.

Wanjira Mathai, wPower and Global Restoration Council, World Resources Institute.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, OR TO ARRANGE INTERVIEWS, CONTACT:

Teko Nhlapo, Communication & Advocacy, Sustainable Land Management, NEPAD Agency
tekoh@nepad.org, +2783 596 8752

Natasha Ferrari, Communications Officer, Global Restoration Initiative, World Resources Institute (WRI)
Natasha.Ferrari@wri.org

Rodrigo Ordóñez, Media Outreach, Global Landscapes Forum (GLF)
r.ordonez@cgiar.org, +62 82124935323

PHOTOS AND VIDEOS AVAILABLE (UPON REQUEST):

Photos and HD video of the 2nd Annual Partners Meeting in Niger.
Photos of forest landscape restoration initiatives in Niger and other countries.

End of culled press release from  AFR100 (the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative).

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