Thursday 20 April 2017

An Open Letter To Israel's Ambassador To Ghana

Your Excellency,

I shall go straight to the point: You could actually  improve the trade relationship between Israel and Ghana, considerably,  by using the protection of the remainder of Ghana's natural heritage, to neutralise the massive collective carbon footprint of both Corporate  Israel and the State of Israel itself - in carbon credit deals with fringe-forest communities.

Excellency, would such a win-win low-carbon development (LCD) initiative not provide direct cash payments to fringe-forest communities, as well as  the  Forestry Commission, as Redd+ carbon credit payment schemes supporting community carbon sequestration initiatives, by companies such as the airline El Al and Israel's high-tech sector?

Ditto neutralise the carbon footprint of the Israeli Self-Defence Forces?

If fringe-forest communities benefit directly financially from protecting forests it will guarantee the long-term future of the remainder of our nation's natural heritage - and secure a reasonably good quality of life for future generations of  our people at a time when global climate change is impacting our continent so negatively.

As you know, the relationship between Israel and Ghana dates back to the period during the tenure of Ghana's first President, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

President Nkrumah borrowed many ideas from Israel, such as the Workers Brigade that provided jobs for many young Ghanaians and also did a lot of innovative work in our nation's agricultural sector then.

And the Israeli road construction company  Solel Boneh was a pioneer in Ghana's road construction sector. It built the concrete Accra-Tema motorway.

Although it is not my place to speak on his behalf, and indeed I  do not pretend to do so, Excellency, I am sure that  you could collaborate with the Okyenhene, Osagyefo Amoatia Ofori Panin, who being a committed environmentalist,  will doubtless  be happy to welcome collaboration between  your embassy and his Akyem Abuakwa State Council, for a pilot green economy  project.

That will enable your embassy  to adopt the Atewa Range upland evergreen rainforest - a designated Globally Significant Biodiversity Area (GSBA) by Conservation International - which serves as watershed for three major river systems, the Birim,  Ayensu and Densu, which provide the drinking water supply of much of southern urban Ghana, for that innovative LCD  initiative giving Israel the opportunity  to neutralise its considerable carbon footprint.

Furthermore,  the restoration of land degraded by illegal gold miners and illegal loggers across vast swathes of the Ghanaian countryside, could be carried out in Akyem Abuakwa by Kibbutz-style cooperatives of unemployed rural youth previously engaged in illegal gold mining and illegal logging, leveraging the Workers Brigade model -  in agro-forestry tree plantations and  growing vertiver grass to remove the heavy metals and other toxins from degraded land in mined out gold concessions.

Thank you, Excellency.

Yours in the service of Mother Ghana,

Kofi.

No comments: