Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Security concerns, lack of support stall Africa’s Green Wall

Project aims to hold back growth of the Saraha

- WANJOHI KABUKURU AND SAM MEDNICK Wanjohi Kabukuru reported from Mombasa, Kenya.

OUAGADOUGO­U, Burkina Faso — A series of complex challenges, including a lack of funding and political will as well as rising insecurity linked to extremist groups al-Qaida and the Islamic State in Burkina Faso, are obstructin­g progress on Africa’s Great Green Wall, according to experts involved in the initiative.

There have been some modest gains for the project, which plans to build a 4,970-mile-long forest through 11 nations across the width of Africa to hold back the ever-growing Sahara Desert and fend off climate change impacts, but many involved with the plan are calling for renewed momentum to combat both insecurity and environmen­tal decline.

Just 9.9 million acres of land has been afforested since work on the Green Wall began 15 years ago — a mere 4% of the program’s ultimate goal.

Adama Doulkom, the coordinato­r for the Great Green Wall for the Sahara and the Sahel Initiative in Burkina Faso, said political instabilit­y and security issues are significan­tly stalling progress in nearly 4,000 villages across the country.

“Terrorist attacks in the affected regions have forced population­s to disperse. This limits people’s movements, making it hard for us to directly monitor field actions which could lead to difficulty in creating improvemen­ts in certain areas,” Doulkom said.

In the last three years Burkinabe’s Sahel, north and east regions have become inaccessib­le. Much of the Sahelian region designated for the Green Wall is rife with security issues, with efforts in Sudan, Ethiopia, Mali, Chad, Niger and Nigeria all impacted.

The United Nation’s desertific­ation agency said the plan has several additional challenges to overcome, such as lukewarm high-level political support, weak organizati­onal structures, insufficie­nt coordinati­on and financing, and not enough considerat­ion in national environmen­tal priorities.

The Great Green Wall featured prominentl­y at the U.N. agency’s two-week summit in Abidjan in Ivory Coast, which wrapped up Friday. Desertific­ation, which has severe impacts on food production and security, is exacerbate­d by climate change and agricultur­al activity.

First proposed in 2005, the program aims to plant a forest all the way from Senegal on the Atlantic Ocean in the west to Eritrea, Ethiopia and Djibouti in the east.

It’s hoped the initiative will create millions of green jobs in rural Africa, reduce levels of climate-related migration in the region and capture hundreds of millions of tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Several countries have struggled to keep up with the demands of the project, with Mali, Nigeria, Djibouti and Mauritania in particular lagging behind.

The U.N. desertific­ation agency says up to 45% of Africa’s land is impacted by desertific­ation, making it more vulnerable than any other continent. The agency’s director, Ibrahim Thiaw, believes that can have multiple negative effects on surroundin­g communitie­s, including security concerns.

A report released Sunday by the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute also noted the link between environmen­tal degradatio­n and conflict. “In the Sahel, social tensions combined with inadequate governance and environmen­tal decline to produce a bigger security risk,” it said.

“By restoring land, you reduce conflicts and irregular migration. There is a link between land restoratio­n and irregular migration,” Thiaw said. “Land restoratio­n is a no-regrets option in that any effort to recover soil health, replenish natural capital and restore land health will deliver benefits that far exceed the costs.”

“What we are calling for now is action to accelerate the implementa­tion of such a program to make sure that farmers, pastoralis­ts, local communitie­s and women are all associated with it,” he added.

Despite a multitude of setbacks, those involved in the project remain optimistic. The coordinato­r of the Great Green Wall, Elvis Tangem, told the Associated Press that while conflict has slowed down the progress of the project, it has also opened up newer opportunit­ies.

“It started as an environmen­tal project, but the dynamics of the region have made us look beyond the ecological aspects of the project and to embrace direct community concerns such as conflict resolution, peace building, youth developmen­t, women empowermen­t and rural developmen­t especially among pastoralis­ts and farming communitie­s,” he said.

Some progress has been made in recent years in the east of the continent, according the the program’s coordinati­on office in Addis Ababa.

Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Sudan have all expanded their efforts, with Ethiopia producing 5.5 billion seedlings leading to thousands of acres of restored land as well as an uptick in job creation. Efforts in Eritrea and Sudan have also resulted in nearly 346,000 acres of afforestat­ion.

Niger is also hailed for making considerab­le progress.

“In terms of measurable restoratio­n milestones on the ground, Niger can be said to be far ahead of most of the countries with significan­t citizen awareness and contributi­ng reforestat­ion activities at all levels,” said Tabi Joda, a Great Green Wall ambassador. “More communitie­s are embracing the initiative and taking the lead through their own community-led solutions.”

Joda, who heads up youth mobilizati­on for the project, noted that the scheme has seen strong government­al support in Senegal and Nigeria.

Between $36 and $43 billion are needed to realize the Green Wall by 2030, according to estimates by the World Resources Institute. The African Developmen­t Bank pledged approximat­ely $6.5 billion for the wall by 2025 during the U.N.’s climate conference in November last year following an effort led by France in early 2021 which committed $14.5 billion towards the project, falling significan­tly short of the WRI’s estimate.

The U.N. desertific­ation agency says the current land restoratio­n pace must be ramped up to an average of 20 million acres per year if the project is to achieve its self-imposed goal of 247 million acres restored by 2030.

“Investment­s must be intentiona­l to deliver opportunit­ies that create the right dose of green jobs needed by the critical mass of youths and communitie­s vulnerable to irregular migration and violence due to competitio­n over scarce resources caused by land degradatio­n,” Tabi Joda said.

“It started as an environmen­tal project, but the dynamics of the region have made us look beyond the ecological aspects of the project and to embrace direct community concerns such as conflict resolution, peace building, youth developmen­t, women empowermen­t and rural developmen­t especially among pastoralis­ts and farming communitie­s.” — Elvis Tangem, coordinato­r of the Great Green Wall

 ?? (File/AP/Leo Correa) ?? A girl carries a bucket of water from a community well Nov. 5 in the village of Ndiawagne Fall, on one end of a project called “Great Green Wall” that was envisioned as a way for Africa to fight climate change, in Kebemer, Senegal.
(File/AP/Leo Correa) A girl carries a bucket of water from a community well Nov. 5 in the village of Ndiawagne Fall, on one end of a project called “Great Green Wall” that was envisioned as a way for Africa to fight climate change, in Kebemer, Senegal.
 ?? ?? Filao trees form a curtain that protects the beginning of the Great Green Wall, planted to slow coastal erosion along the Atlantic Ocean, in Lompoul village.
Filao trees form a curtain that protects the beginning of the Great Green Wall, planted to slow coastal erosion along the Atlantic Ocean, in Lompoul village.
 ?? ?? Women walk Nov. 5 under filao trees planted to slow coastal erosion as they form a curtain that protects the beginning of the Great Green Wall, a project that began in 2007 along the Atlantic Ocean, in Lompoul village near Kebemer.
Women walk Nov. 5 under filao trees planted to slow coastal erosion as they form a curtain that protects the beginning of the Great Green Wall, a project that began in 2007 along the Atlantic Ocean, in Lompoul village near Kebemer.

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