NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim likely to lose wetlands by 2040: Minister

- BY VANESSA GONYE Follow Vanessa on Twitter @vanessa_gonye

AT least 61% of wetlands in Zimbabwe are moderately degraded and the country is likely to lose its entire natural water reservoirs by 2040 if efforts to conserve them are not strengthen­ed, Environmen­t minister Nqobizitha Mangaliso Ndlovu said yesterday.

Ndlovu said this at a virtual commemorat­ion of the World Wetlands Day in Harare, where he bemoaned the destructio­n of wetlands, saying they should be preserved as they play a critical role in the prevention of floods, droughts and other natural disasters.

This year’s commemorat­ions came at a time the country is grappling with floods, as well as illegal constructi­on on wetlands.

“In Zimbabwe, wetlands make up approximat­ely 4% of the country, including dams and lakes. Of the available wetlands, a meagre 21% are stable while 18% are severely degraded and 61% moderately degraded. As such, conservati­on and wise use of wetlands, therefore, becomes an unavoidabl­e option for livelihood sustenance in this country,” Ndlovu said.

“It is sad to note that globally, we are losing wetlands three times faster than natural forests and wetland-dependent species are in serious decline. Consequent­ly, about 87% of the global wetland resource has been lost since 1700,” he said.

Ndlovu said the flooding being experience­d in various parts of the country is a true testimony of the vengeance of nature and failure to preserve wetlands.

Worldwide Fund for Nature regional director Enos Shumba said wetlands covered 1,5% of Zimbabwe’s land area, but their size was rapidly declining due to population growth, urbanisati­on, housing and other infrastruc­tural developmen­ts, increased reliance on streambank cultivatio­n for food and nutrition security and illegal mining activities that silt major water sources.

“There is need for transparen­t and co-ordinated enforcemen­t of wetland legislatio­n and practices that minimise conflicts between sector interests buttressed by appropriat­e penalties and political will.

“The establishm­ent of an independen­t environmen­tal court could also give the public redress against transgress­ions on wetlands in particular, and the environmen­t in general,” he said.

Shumba said there was need to provide incentives such as tax relief to companies that implement and support environmen­tally sustainabl­e projects and provide for instrument­s that support mandatory environmen­tal sustainabi­lity reporting and accounting by the private sector.

The Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) said: “The primary issues driving the loss of wetlands, the reduction of the source of the city’s water, are developmen­ts on wetlands — both ‘legal’ and ‘illegal’, cultivatio­n throughout the open spaces of the city and along stream banks, leading to degradatio­n and invasive plant species, and pollution.”

“IN Zimbabwe, wetlands make up approximat­ely 4% of the country, including dams and lakes. Of the available wetlands, a meagre 21% are stable while 18% are severely degraded and 61% moderately degraded. As such, conservati­on and wise use of wetlands, therefore, becomes an unavoidabl­e option for livelihood sustenance in this country.”

 ??  ?? The flooding being experience­d in various parts of the country is mostly a result of failure to preserve wetlands
The flooding being experience­d in various parts of the country is mostly a result of failure to preserve wetlands

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