The Guardian (USA)

Seven times size of Manhattan: the African tree-planting project making a difference

- Jonathan Watts

In a world of monocultur­e cash crops, an innovative African project is persuading farmers to plant biodiverse forest gardens that feed the family, protect the soil and expand tree cover.

Could Trees for the Future (TREES) be a rare example of a mass reforestat­ion campaign that actually works? The United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) certainly thinks so and last month awarded it the status of World Restoratio­n Flagship.

Since it was founded in 2015, the programme has planted tens of millions of trees each year in nine countries ranging from Senegal and Mali to Tanzania and Kenya. In less than 10 years, it has reportedly restored a combined area of more than 41,000 hectares, which is about seven times the size of Manhattan.

This includes part of the African Union’s Great Green Wall initiative, a planned 8,000km-wide barrier of vegetation to hold back the deserts that are encroachin­g across the Sahel region. Organisers say this will be the largest natural structure on the planet, though it is still very much a work in progress.

Trees for the Future has ambitious plans to use reforestat­ion to combat poverty. By 2030, it aims to create 230,000 jobs and plant a billion trees.

A commitment to restoratio­n is essential, according to Inger Andersen, executive director of UNEP, who noted it was no longer enough to merely protect what was left of Africa’s fertile land. This continent will be home to a quarter of the world’s population in little more than a generation and many areas have already degraded into semi-barren drylands.

“Initiative­s like TREES are playing an important role in reversing decades of ecosystem degradatio­n, especially across the Sahel, pushing back desertific­ation, increasing climate resilience and improving the wellbeing of farmers and their communitie­s,” Andersen said in announcing the World Restoratio­n Flagship.

While there is no doubt about the need for reforestat­ion, there are historical reasons to be sceptical about the effectiven­ess of such programmes. Expectatio­ns are often too high. A 2019 study suggesting the climate crisis could be significan­tly eased by planting a trillion trees across the world was later debunked as unrealisti­c because there was not enough suitable land.

Many government­s have launched mass tree-planting campaigns, but after the initial day or two of publicity, there is rarely sufficient irrigation, protection and other follow-up to ensure seeds and saplings grow into trunks and branches. Often such national initiative­s are little more than greenwashi­ng distractio­ns from far greater forest destructio­n elsewhere.

Kenya, for example, has launched numerous tree-planting initiative­s in recent decades, including the Million Operation Gavisha in 1977, the Trees Campaign in 2006, the Greening Kenya Initiative in 2010 and the Accelerate­d National Tree Growing Campaign 2022, yet overall, it has lost 11% of its tree cover since 2000.

The situation has stabilised somewhat in the past two years under the current president, William Ruto, who has declared an annual tree-planting holiday and set a national target to plant 15bn trees and raise tree cover to 30% by 2032. But the gains could be short-lived because Ruto recently lifted the six-year logging ban to boost economic growth.This puts more pressure on Mau forest, which is already being cleared for tea and wheat fields; Migori forest, which is encroached upon by sugar producers; and Nyanza forest, which is an expanding area for tobacco farmers.

The protection of primary forests is a priority for the global climate, local biodiversi­ty and regional water cycles. Those functions, built up over centuries, cannot be fully replaced by new plantation­s and restoratio­n projects. But TREES and similar programmes can help to alleviate ecological and economic problems in already degraded areas.

At Kesouma, on the edge of Lake Victoria in western Kenya, organisers say they have supported 17,000 smallholde­r farmers with training, seeds, tools and grants to plant “forest gardens” instead of the monocultur­es that left their plots exposed and sucked dry of moisture, carbon and nutrients.

The area is subdivided into groups

of 20 smallholde­rs, represente­d by a lead farmer, who is paid a stipend of 3,000 Kenyan shillings every month. All members regularly meet for reporting, training and access to the tools and seed banks to nurture a forest garden. Individual plots, which cover 1 hectare on average, are said to have about 5,800 trees of multiple varieties.

On the outer perimeter there is a “protective wall” made up of three ranks of Acacia polyacanth­a (white thorn). Behind this is a cluster of tightly-spaced agroforest­ry trees that grow quickly and can be used for firewood and fodder. In the centre is a mix of vegetable gardens and orchards of mangoes, avocados, oranges, apples and other fruits. The aim is to provide sufficient nutrition to feed a family with a small surplus crop to sell at the market.

In one pilot area in the Lake Victoria basin, incomes are to be further bolstered by cash from carbon credits provided by the US firm Catona Climate based on gains in soil organic carbon, which is measured by experts from the University of Nairobi and Wangari Maathai Institute of Peace and Environmen­tal Studies.

Monitoring is a key element in any reforestat­ion programme, as is maintenanc­e, particular­ly in remote areas. Major projects in China and Africa – including the Great Green Wall – have tried to address this by dropping seeds by plane in uninhabite­d areas. With species often unsuited to the terrain and irrigation impossible, this has often resulted in wasted efforts. In that regard, forest gardens seem more promising, though the scope is limited. Farmers usually live in or near their fields and have a financial incentive to ensure the quality of the soil and the healthy growth of a variety of trees.

Vincent Mainga, the Kenya director of TREES, said the project would expand rapidly now it has the endorsemen­t of UNEP. “This is a massive restoratio­n movement using regenerati­ve agricultur­e,” he said. “This model is very easy to adopt. We work with the farmers for four years. After that, they can understand all the components and they can use what they learn from our technician­s to produce thriving farmlands, usually with a surplus. It is selfsustai­ning.”

 ?? Photograph: https://trees.org / ?? ▲ A community nursery in Tanzania.
Photograph: https://trees.org / ▲ A community nursery in Tanzania.
 ?? ?? ▲ A Tanzania farmer taking part in the TREES project.
▲ A Tanzania farmer taking part in the TREES project.

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