Fiji Sun

Tree Planting Vital for Combating the Effects of Climate Change

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For 85-year-old Unaisi Logawai of Rauriko Village in the district of Dogotuki, Macuata climate change and its impact are real. She has witnessed firsthand the reality of how the change in weather patterns and the change in climatic seasons has affected her community.

Speaking in iTaukei, Ms Logawai said while growing up she can definitely see the difference­s that climate change has brought about. For more than eight decades she has seen the drastic impact climate change has caused in her island home.

“I feel that we have limited time on our hands to address the effects of climate change. We need to work together now to combat this issue as a community and I believe we also need to work with Government,” she said.

She is of the view that planting a lot more trees will surely help absorb carbon dioxide and so there are less emissions into the earth’s atmosphere which is causing global warming and in turn the change in weather patterns.

Minister’s Northern tour

Ms Logawai made the comments during a recent official visit by the Minister for Forestry, Osea Naiqamu to Rauriko Village where he encouraged villagers to participat­e in Fiji’s 30MillionT­reesin 15Years (30MT15Y) initiative.

Mr Naiqamu is currently in Vanua Levu on a two week visit where he first visited Qaranivai Village in the district of Udu.

He has since visited Lagi, Nukudamu, Nabuono, Vunikodi, Yasawa, Gasauva, Waqaitakea, Tawake, Wainigadru, Rauriko and Namukai-Lau villages in the districts of Udu and Dogotuki.

Relaying recent experience­s, Unaisi said that the village is situated beside a river and they now experience frequent flooding each time there is heavy rain or during a cyclone. She said the village is also facing sea level rise as the shoreline continues to move further inland.

“Trees that bear fruit in the months of December to January and other months no longer do so and I believe these are because of the change in weather patterns.

Birds that used to fly around our village when I was young can no longer be seen today. We have had to rebuild or relocate our homes a few times because of flooding in the village.”

These she said were challenges faced now, which she did not encounter while growing up. Considered one of the matriarchs with an outspoken personalit­y, villagers often seek Ms Logawai’s advice on village matters. She also held the post of village headman (turaga-nikoro) at one time for 10 years.

“We are the last generation with the opportunit­y to save our communitie­s from the impact of climate change. The Ministry of Forestry’s reforestat­ion plan is a good idea as villagers will be able to have a tree planting plan for the short-term, mid-term and long-term.”

Fiji as a Small Island Developing State (SIDS) in the tropical Pacific region is proud to be leading the initiative of planting 30 million trees in 15 years with 2 million trees being planted annually.

Battling climate change

Communitie­s are highly vulnerable to the effects of climate change and these impacts are projected to further intensify under the anticipate­d global warming trajectory and impacts which poses a threat to Fiji’s sustainabl­e growth, placing large economic, social and physical stress on local communitie­s and ecosystems.

Fiji’s Emissions Reduction Programme (ERP) has been designed to assist communitie­s in reducing carbon emissions, to maximise climate co-benefits and integrate existing local initiative­s that address vulnerabil­ities of local communitie­s and contribute to the effort of building a more resilient nation. The ERP will begin implementa­tion next month (July 2020), with a focus on 20 districts in Viti Levu, Vanua Levu and Taveuni with an area totalling about 1,685742 ha of critical terrestria­l biodiversi­ty.

There is an estimate of 734,307 people in these districts who live on hilly areas, coastal plains and undulating rolling hills of peri-urban areas.

These 20 districts are at high risk of forest loss and degradatio­n and are areas with large communitie­s and settlement­s at the forest edge and areas with high poverty and known biodiversi­ty hotspots. Fiji’s ER programme has set targets to develop and implement 20 Integrated District Land Use Management Plans with the support of 120 communitie­s and 40 community level integrated Land Use Plans which will significan­tly include tree planting initiative­s and forest conservati­on efforts.

Helping the environmen­t

The overall impact of Land Use Plans is anticipate­d to result in avoiding deforestat­ion in 9500 ha, enhance forest carbon stocks through tree planting initiative­s at community level in 11,750 ha and enhance forest carbon stocks involving plantation­s in 7532 ha and reducing forest degradatio­n by implementi­ng sustainabl­e harvesting of Fiji’s native forests in 8,500ha. Fiji’s ER Programme will more importantl­y contribute to the 30MT15Y initiative and for this Mr Naiqamu has said the renewed massive tree-planting programme signifies the Government’s commitment to elevate the importance of trees and forests as it is critical to nation building, whilst reviving our kinship with nature and its relevance to our very own existence on this planet. He said Fiji’s treeplanti­ng initiative is also part of the global reforestat­ion movement to increase the Planet’s ability to absorb carbon, and ultimately address climate change.

Mr Naiqamu added, the Ministry of Forestry has just recently launched a survey and dashboard for the 30MT15Y which records a tally of trees planted by individual­s, corporate organizati­ons and communitie­s.

He is encouragin­g Fijian citizens to log onto the Ministry’s website www.forestry.gov.fj each time they plant and to record their tally of trees planted with the Ministry as everyone’s contributi­on to the 30MT15Y campaign counts.

 ?? Photo: Ministry of Forestry ?? Unaisi Logawai meets Forestry Minister Osea Naiqamu at Rauriko Village after planting a tree.
Photo: Ministry of Forestry Unaisi Logawai meets Forestry Minister Osea Naiqamu at Rauriko Village after planting a tree.
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