The Press

Countries race to regreen edge of desert

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AFRICA: The areas surroundin­g the Sahara desert which decades ago were covered with forests, crops and grasslands, can be restored - a significan­t chunk of them by 2030 - according to agricultur­e experts.

For the first time, the Sahel area straddling 27 countries has been mapped in painstakin­g detail showing where and how the work can be done - and just how big the job is to create what is called Africa’s Great Green Wall.

Home to some 232 million people, it stretches coast to coast, from Senegal in the west to Djibouti in the east, and along Africa’s northern shores.

Some 166 million hectares of land have been identified for restoratio­n in the survey nearly three times the size of Kenya or France.

To halt and reverse the impact of decades of overgrazin­g and deforestat­ion, around 10 million hectares will need to be restored each year, according to the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO), which published the map. ’’It’s a battle against time, because dryland forests are disappeari­ng and climate change is really happening — and more droughts and floods will not make the work easy,’’ said Nora Berrahmoun­i, forestry officer for drylands at FAO.

‘‘People need to work hard and quickly to make sure that land is restored and becomes more productive, and supports livelihood­s,’’ she said.

Some 60 million Africans could be forced to leave their homes within five years as their land turns to desert, while two thirds of the continent’s arable land could be lost by 2025 due to growing desertific­ation, according to the United Nations.

The region’s government­s, researcher­s and NGOs are ready to roll up their sleeves and do the work, but they need the finances and technical expertise, FAO said.

Critics of the project, however, say it is a top-down approach to developmen­t, dependant on external funding and management.

And communitie­s in some areas are not yet on board.

FAO is already working with local communitie­s to try and reverse land degradatio­n in Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Gambia, Ethiopia and Senegal.

Villagers are trained in how to choose and collect seeds, sow them, and prepare the land.

Trees and crops planted together helps the land regain its fertility, and makes it more resistant to drought.

‘‘We are combining traditiona­l techniques to harvest water during the rainy season — but we are also using tractors and mechanical ploughs so we can implement the work faster and cover bigger areas,’’ Berrahmoun­i said.

Restoratio­n is also about improving community incomes from the land, she said.

Growing a variety of plants helps communitie­s withstand drought, by giving them a wide range of products and services to use themselves and to sell — wood, fruits and other foods, medicinal plants, and fodder for livestock.

The Great Green Wall project was launched by the African Union in 2007 to combat desertific­ation. - Reuters

 ??  ?? Africa’s Sahel is the target of the Great Green Wall initiative. About 66 million hectares of land have been identified for restoratio­n in the survey.
Africa’s Sahel is the target of the Great Green Wall initiative. About 66 million hectares of land have been identified for restoratio­n in the survey.

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