The Jerusalem Post

‘Billion tree tsunami’ surges across northern Pakistan

- • By RINA SAEED KHAN

ISLAMABAD (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – One of Pakistan’s greenest provinces is becoming greener still: In just a year it has added three-quarters of a billion new trees, as part of a “tree tsunami” aimed at reversing worsening forest loss.

“The success on the ground is phenomenal. This is not just about planting trees but about changing attitudes,” said Rab Nawaz, senior director of programs for WWF-Pakistan, which has helped audit the tree-planting effort.

The “Billion Tree Tsunami,” which involves adding trees both by planting and natural regenerati­on, is backed by cricketing legend Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf party, which governs in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province, in Pakistan’s northwest.

It aims to turn around deforestat­ion and increase the province’s forested area by at least 2%.

Years of tree felling have reduced Pakistan’s forests to under 2% of its land area, one of the lowest levels in the region, according to a 2015 UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on report.

About 40% of the country’s remaining forests are in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province, where Khan’s tree planting effort is expected to hit its billion-tree goal by the end of 2017.

In preparatio­n for the reforestat­ion effort, the provincial government helped set up a network of tree nurseries across the province in 2016, providing loans and purchase agreements for tree saplings.

Altogether it has spent 11 billion rupees ($110 million) on the effort, said Malik Amin Aslam, the chairman of the province’s Green Growth Initiative.

About 13,000 government and private nurseries, in almost every district of the province, are now producing hundreds of thousands of saplings of local and imported tree varieties, including pines, walnuts and eucalyptus, Aslam told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The nurseries have provided about 40% of the new trees in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a; the remaining trees have come from natural regenerati­on in forests now put under protection, he said.

Many small-scale nurseries, producing up to 25,000 saplings, have been set up with cash advances and a guaranteed purchase agreement from the provincial government.

Such small nurseries can earn incomes of around 12,000 to 15,000 rupees ($115-$140) a month, a sizeable income for rural villagers, said Aslam.

An estimated 500,000 “green jobs” have been created through the effort, some of which have gone to rural women and unemployed youth, he said.

“People have become aware that forests are Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a’s precious resource,” he added.

Aslam said the regenerati­on effort is being monitored by both the provincial forest department and WWF-Pakistan, working as an auditor.

Nawaz, of WWF, said he had just returned from three days looking at 2.5 million new trees in the province. He called the restoratio­n “an amazing achievemen­t” by the government’s forest department and by local communitie­s who are paid to plant trees.

“Whether you support Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf or not, no one can deny that this is an environmen­tal, economic and social success for other provinces to follow,” he said.

The project is being monitored using modern technology. Last week Khan launched the project’s website, which includes GPS coordinate­s of all the plantation­s and a live tree counter.

“This is a project for the future of Pakistan and something I keep very close to my heart. It is not only helping Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a by providing a green, breathable environmen­t and green jobs but is also building up Pakistan’s much needed defense against the high climate vulnerabil­ity that it faces,” the cricketer-turned-politician told the Thomas Reuters Foundation.

As well, “it significan­tly contribute­s to the global efforts for sequesteri­ng carbon and mitigating climate change,” Khan said.

To protect its forests, Khan’s provincial government has also enforced a complete ban on the cutting and felling of trees in reserved forests.

The government says the activities of the powerful “timber mafia” have been curtailed through dismantlin­g more than 600 illegal sawmills and arresting more than 300 timber cutters, as well as issuing heavy fines.

“Two of our forest guards have been killed in timber encounters while many have braved injuries,” Aslam said. “All of these steps have forced the timber mafia on to the back foot and delivered a clear political message of ‘zero tolerance’ to the illicit cutting of wood.”

The project has been recognized by the Bonn Challenge, a global partnershi­p aiming to restore 150 million hectares of the world’s deforested and degraded lands by 2020.

The Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a government – the only province to register under the Bonn Challenge, Pakistani officials said – has committed to restore 380,000 hectares of forests and has already achieved nearly 80% of that goal, Aslam said.

The Bonn challenge website estimates an economic benefit of the reforestat­ion effort at $121m. for the province, in terms of carbon sequestrat­ion, better watershed improvemen­t and future sustainabl­e wood supplies.

The project has proven so popular that the federal government of Pakistan, led by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s opposing Pakistan Muslim League party, has now begun implementi­ng its own “Green Pakistan Program.”

The aim of the program is to plant 100 million trees all over the country over the next five years.

 ?? (Rina Saeed Khan/Thomson Reuters Foundation) ?? A GOVERNMENT-RUN tree nursery is seen in Haripur, in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province.
(Rina Saeed Khan/Thomson Reuters Foundation) A GOVERNMENT-RUN tree nursery is seen in Haripur, in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province.

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