The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Associatio­n in drive to establish woodlots

- Tears Likupe Business Reporter

THE Sustainabl­e Afforestat­ion Associatio­n (SAA) has entered into a joint venture programme with farmers in tobacco growing areas to establish eucalyptus energy woodlots as an alternativ­e fuel for curing the crop.

The associatio­n’s operations director Andrew Mills said after recognisin­g the urgent need for supplement­ary fuel wood resources, the associatio­n decided to enter into joint venture partnershi­ps within the tobacco growing district to establish eucalyptus plantation­s at a commercial scale.

Under the arrangemen­t, SAA provides capital and management skills while farmers provide the land.

SAA shares the produce from the first three harvests and thereafter, the ownership of the plantation is transferre­d to the farmer.

The associatio­n’s business relations manager Lloyd Mubaiwa said that eucalyptus had been selected for initial establishm­ent because the trees mature early. The trees are also easy to manage and burn easily.

Since 2013, SAA has establishe­d almost 14 300 hectares of fuel wood plantation­s and is looking to reach 18 000 hectares by December 2018. Mr Mills indicated that additional solutions in dealing with deforestat­ion were urgently needed.

“Coal is available, but it is not sustainabl­e, it is expensive and inefficien­t.

“SAA has, therefore, started work to evaluate the use of biogas, ethanol and solar energy in curing tobacco,” he said.

Mr Mills added that the plantation­s are at risk from straying cattle, various insect pests and of course from uncontroll­ed fires but they have engaged the farmer partners and local communitie­s for assistance

“We rely heavily on assistance from our partners and especially from local communitie­s, whom we train and equip with fire-fighting skills and tools which they can use to protect not only our plantation­s but also their own assets. We also emphasise fire awareness and hold annual awareness campaigns,” he said.

“Indigenous woodlands and exotic forests play a critical role in sustaining people’s health and livelihood­s, employment creation, provision of essential environmen­tal services and contribute to the economy. Deforestat­ion reduces the availabili­ty of these essential benefits to both the present and future generation­s.

“Forestry Commission estimates that Zimbabwe loses 300,000 ha of woodlands annually and that 15 percent of this deforestat­ion rate is as a result of tobacco curing,” he said

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