ENVIRONMENT The challenges of FG’s Wall of Trees Project Agency: Sites face theft, vandalism
Nigeria joins the rest of the world to mark the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought last Saturday.
The Day is observed on June17 every year, to promote public awareness of international efforts to combat desertification.
This year’s celebration tagged, “Our land Our Home. Our future” examines the important link between land degradation and migration.
It also looks at other issues on environmental degradation, food insecurity and poverty.
Desertification is the result of a cycle of land degradation, turning once fertile soils into sterile land as a consequence of over-exploitation by intensive farming, forest exploitation for fuel and timber, and overgrazing.
According to UNESCO, desertification is a global phenomenon, affecting the livelihoods of 900 million people across the five continents and representing a third of worldwide threats to biodiversity. It requires global attention.
Nigeria is one of the countries faced with rapid desert encroachment, with notable effects on the northern part of the country.
The impact has been more glaring over the years due to global warming and threatening many livelihoods in the areas.
According to Food and Agriculture Organisation, Nigeria loses about 350,000 hectares of land every year to desert encroachment.
This has led to demographic displacements in villages across 11 states in the North. It is estimated that Nigeria loses about $5.1billion every year owing to rapid encroachment of drought and desert in most parts of the north.
These problem which is obvious in the 11 frontline Northern states has threatened the livelihoods of over 40 million Nigerians by destroying human settlements and enforced migration, increasing rural poverty and social conflicts.
The Federal government in an effort to address the menace of desertification took a bold step three years back to implement the Great Green Programme (GGW) project in the 11 frontline states to help fight the effects of climate change in the region.
According to the national action plan for the implementation of the project in Nigeria, participating states, which include Adamawa, Borno, Kano, Jigawa, Gombe, Bauchi, Katsina, Zamfara, Kebbi, Sokoto and Yobe are expected to make land available for the planting of the Nigeria component of the wall of trees.
The GGW is to cover about 1,500kmlong (East-West) and 2km-wide (North-South), using both economic and forest tree species to be based on community-driven, integrated rural development approach as agreed for the Nigeria segment.
Proper and careful implementation of the project, aside creating employment, would ensure that the degraded lands would be rehabilitated, enhance food security and reduce poverty as member of the participating communities would have their sources of livelihood enhanced.
However, an investigation by Daily Trust shows that the wall of trees project in some of the states has not been a complete success story since the flag off the project by former president Goodluck Jonathan in 2014.
Katsina
Our reporter gathered that the GGW project is facing serious challenges including failed boreholes, missing fences and signposts in addition to unpaid allowances of forest guards, which has forced many to abandon the job in the state.
The project executed in the frontline local governments of Baure, Daura, Mai’Adua, Kaita, Mashi, Katsina, Jibia, Zango and Sandamu, with major components of Shelterbelt establishment and Community Nursery/Orchards, alternative wood use for fuel, have all suffered setbacks.
It was gathered that a total of 28 kilometres of the shelterbelt starting from Gurbin Baure in Jibia Local Government, which connects with Zurmi Local Government in Zamfara State was established and another of 2 km to cover Baure and Zango local governments to connect with that established by Jigawa State at Shabarun Jeke village in Sule Tankarkar Local Government, was established last year but also suffered setback due to lack of fund.
A visit to Ganga village in Daura where the Wet and Dry Season Farmers Cooperative of the community was engaged to produce 20,000 seedlings each year, showed that their only source of water, a solar powered borehole, was not functioning optimally.
The association’s chairman, Abdurrahman Shuaibu, said for the past three years, they have been making do with the borehole, which had problem right from installation.
In Gurbi and Tsayau communities of Jibia LGA, virtually all the seedlings planted have dried up due to the failed borehole that was supposed to supply water to the plantation. Similarly in Dagi village, the borehole provided had developed technical issues, and the orchard has failed.
A GGW field officer, Yusuf Umar, admitted that the programme was encountering several challenges, technical and natural disasters.
For Ali Bugaje, a community leader in Jibia, most of the casual workers are complaining of non-payment of their allowances for months.
Yobe
The programme has the longest boundary here, covering 363 kilometers - reaching up to Niger Republic. This goes beyond the borders of Machina, Karasuwa, Yusufari, Geidam and Yunusari local government areas of the state.
Our correspondent gathered that the entire programme has suffered a setback in Yobe since it was neglected in 2016 and 2017 due lack of sustainability of funding from the federal government.
Out of all three shelterbelts, only that in Machina, at Kaganama community, was successful.
Masafa Hassan, a farmer in Kaska community said the seedlings were planted toward the end of the rainy season, and that without an alternative source of watering them during the dry season, the seedlings dried off.
He said the plantations established, which were mostly economic trees in orchards, recorded tremendous success because boreholes were drilled for watering them and they were fenced against people and animals that could cause any destruction.
Meanwhile, a source from the Yobe State Ministry of Environment has revealed that “Now, we are only told that the Federal Government is raising seedling for plantation under GGW Programme without consulting our ministry.”
The source said the programme has nurseries in Geidam, Kanamma, Gashua, Bayemari, Yusufari, Jajemaji, Nguru and Damaturu central nursery, but lamented that there were no resources to raise the seedlings to continue with the initiative.
Yobe State Commissioner of Environment, Alhaji Jibrin Kortoni, told our correspondent that the programme was successful in the four local government areas, with the exception of Geidam and some parts of Yunusari because of the insurgency.
Jigawa
The programme in Jigawa State is bedeviled with problems; some of trees planted are undergrown due to lack of attention and some of the shelterbelts were virtually empty as only few of the trees had thrived somewhat.
When Daily Trust visited Jeke village in Suletankarkar Local Government Area, where 18 kilometers of shelterbelts were implemented, most of the belts were an eyesore, as their fences had collapsed, thereby giving pastoralists easy access to plants.
Yakubu Abdullahi, a native of Jeke, the host community, who is also in charge of the shelterbelt attributed the