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A road through the forest

Kenya’s leader wants a paved road to cut through a forested unesco heritage site. scientists don’t.

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IN a dense layer of green thousands of feet above sea level, cedar, podo and hegeina trees pattern the landscape, thick moss hanging from their branches and feathery lichen attached to their barks. Numerous streams and rivers flow between them, plunging over steep waterfalls. Buffaloes, bushbucks and monkeys roam in search of pastures.

This is the Aberdare Range, a forest and mountain range in central Kenya that’s one of the country’s main water sources and a key wildlife habitat.

But it may not remain the same.

The Kenyan government wants to build a 52km tarmac road through the Unesco World Heritage Site to connect two counties, and the country’s environmen­tal agency, the National Environmen­t Management Authority, issued an environmen­tal impact assessment license for the project last month. The project would cut through 24km of closed canopy forest and likely increase vehicle traffic into animal paths.

Residents are optimistic the project could improve their lives. But scientists and conservati­onists fear irreparabl­e damage to the ecosystem. Threatened tree species could get cut down, animals could get hit by vehicles, the road would cut across moorlands – fragile areas for water catchment – and invasive species and pollutants could enter the park through vehicles.

Those in favor of the project, including Kenyan President William Ruto, say it carries economic benefit, arguing that by directly connecting the agricultur­al counties of Nyeri and Nyandarua, the road would increase trade and uplift livelihood­s. Most Kenyans live on a few dollars a day, and in the rural, agricultur­al areas where the roads will connect, the proposed project has supporters.

To transport farm produce and other goods from Nyeri town in Nyeri county to Ndunyu Njeru town in Nyandarua county and back, Francis Kibue, a lorry driver based in Nyeri, circumvent­s the Aberdare Range using a tarmac road, covering a distance of 190km. But the road through the forest and national park would reduce the journey to 64km.

“If you use the new road, you can even do two trips. Because you’ll go, arrive, come back, get more goods, and go back,” he said.

The proposed tarmac road, named Ihithe-ndunyu Njeru Road, would upgrade of a backbreaki­ng dirt road that’s usually used by visitors to the forest and park but rarely by the general public.

In Ndunyu Njeru, a small farming town that’s dotted with single-story buildings, chief Grace Ngige said she has “no objection to the road. It’s developmen­t.” She added a raft of reasons: increased trade between Nyeri and Nyandarua, better access to the Nyeri market for farmers, less distance to cover by students who study in Nyeri, and more tourists from the east for Nyandarua.

In both towns, operators of matatus, vans that transport people, are excited about the prospects of the road, saying it would open up new routes on both sides, bringing in more business.

“We feel very happy, and we thank the country’s leaders for coming together and deciding to open this road,” said matatu operator Patrick Maina in Ndunyu Njeru.

President Ruto has firmly pushed for the constructi­on to start. On different occasions since taking office in 2022, he has called out opposition to the constructi­on plan, insisting that the project proceed before receiving environmen­tal approval by NEMA and objections by conservati­onists.

“Do you want us to build this road or to wait until the judiciary tells us to do so?” he asked at an event last month, before instructin­g an official of the roads ministry to allocate funds for the constructi­on.

Environmen­talists and political analysts say that is tantamount to political interferen­ce and may have affected NEMA’S independen­ce in decision-making.

In response to written questions, Ali Mohamed, Kenya’s special climate envoy, said the president is “committed to sustainabi­lity and gives priority to matters climate action and environmen­tal conservati­on.”

The proposed constructi­on also brings attention to national concern on the president’s recent trend of defying and criticisin­g courts and other independen­t bodies that make decisions against his administra­tion’s plans. He has repeatedly threatened to remove judges he accuses of frustratin­g his projects.

“It is simply intimidati­on,” said Herman Manyara, a Nairobibas­ed political analyst. “Once you have establishe­d institutio­ns to ensure regulation­s are followed, those institutio­ns must be respected.”

The license issued by NEMA since Ruto’s comments has given environmen­talists cause for concern. It’s valid for two months, “time within which the project shall commence,” it says.

NEMA says the road width should be reduced from 40m to 25m. But conservati­onists say any upgrade of the existing road to make it open to all traffic would be detrimenta­l. According to the license, 75ha of bamboo, 14ha of montane forest and 14ha of moorlands would be destroyed in the constructi­on.

Conservati­onists have long called for the Kenya National Highways Authority – who first proposed the road in 2009 – to find alternativ­e routes across and around the Aberdare Range that have minimum environmen­tal impact. Some have set up online petitions.

As one of Kenya’s five major water towers – places that absorb and store water naturally then release it into rivers and lakes – the Aberdare Range provides most of the water used in the capital, Nairobi, and also supplies water to the Seven Forks hydroelect­ric power stations, key generators of electricit­y in the country.

The road may attract human settlement, and with time, fires and grazing would suppress the growth of the vegetation that enables the Aberdare Range to catch rain, said Simon Onywere, associate professor of environmen­tal planning and management at Kenyatta University. The potential damage would take decades to reverse, he said.

“Water is everything. If we live via water, we must not add something that reduces our ability to use it,” he said.

The forest reserve also has Indigenous trees such as the sycamore fig and African cherry, and threatened species like parasol tree, Monterey Pine and African cherry. It has some of the fewer than 100 remaining critically endangered mountain bongos in the world, alongside rhinos, elephants, buffaloes, lions, leopards and others.

The Aberdare National Park also attracts thousands of local residents and foreigners who pay park fees to see animals roam. Tourism is a major income earner for the country, with hundreds of thousands of people employed in the sector.

“This is the one road that a lot of people that come here to see the wildlife will take,” said Isabelle Aron, a tourist visiting the park. “Turning that into commercial is going to be taking away from why people come to the Aberdares.”

The moorland areas where the road would pass through have large population­s of elephants that “cross almost all over,” said Christian Lambrechts, executive director of Rhino Ark, a conservati­on trust, adding that it would destroy their habitats and cause disturbanc­e to them during and after constructi­on, endangerin­g both the animals and road users.

Conservati­onists are urging for developmen­t not to come at the cost of the environmen­t.

“The disconnect between man and the environmen­t,” said Onywere, “is that he’s not able to see what the environmen­t is doing for him.”

 ?? ?? a defassa waterbuck roams in the aberdare National Park. The Kenyan government wants to build a tarmac road to connect two counties through the aberdare range and scientists and conservati­onists say the project would have an irreversib­le impact on the ecosystem. — Photos: ap
a defassa waterbuck roams in the aberdare National Park. The Kenyan government wants to build a tarmac road to connect two counties through the aberdare range and scientists and conservati­onists say the project would have an irreversib­le impact on the ecosystem. — Photos: ap
 ?? ?? a ranger opens a gate at the aberdare National Park in Nyeri, Kenya.
a ranger opens a gate at the aberdare National Park in Nyeri, Kenya.
 ?? ?? constructi­on vehicles are visible in Ndunyu Njeru, Kenya.
constructi­on vehicles are visible in Ndunyu Njeru, Kenya.

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