Agriculture activities contributes 50% to deforestation

By Julius K. Satsi,
GNA

Accra,
Aug 15, GNA – Mr Obed Owusu-Addai, a Campaigner with Ecocare Ghana, has said
agriculture’s contribution to deforestation is enormous as farmers’ interest in
nurturing of trees is on the decline.

He
said a research done by the Ghana REDD+ secretariat identified that agriculture
contributed up to 50 per cent to the causes of deforestation.

Mr
Owusu-Addai was speaking at a workshop organised by Friends of the Earth (FoE)
to build the capacity of journalists to demand accountability and ensure tree
tenure was given appropriate place and said because farmers did not benefit
from the sharing of the revenue that would accrue from the sale of the trees
after harvesting, they did not allow the trees to grow on their farms.

He
said, for a long time, the laws of the country had rendered farmers non
beneficiaries of trees nurtured on their lands and as a result of taking
mitigation strategy, they had resorted to destroying them at a younger stage.

He,
however, noted that the government had taken steps to address the challenge to
allow farmers to benefit from trees they nurtured on their lands as identified
in the newly proposed benefit sharing.

He
indicated that there had always been the need to ensure equitable, efficient,
and effective distribution of the proceeds generated from the sale of timbers.

The
old regime of benefit sharing, Mr Owusu-Addai said totally side-lined the
farmer and landowner as well as the host community where the timbers were
harvested.

The
newly proposed benefit sharing regime for the distribution of stumpage fees
however, allocates not less than 60 per cent of Management fees collected by
the Forestry Commission of Ghana to the farmer and landowner. 

He
urged the media to continuously create awareness, question duty bearers and
increase advocacy in tree tenure and benefit sharing to ensure that the
country’s vegetation was preserved.

GNA 

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