NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Why Zim villagers are struggling with a false scarcity of fuelwood

- This article was reproduced from The Conversati­on Ellen Fungisai Chipango is a Postdoctor­al research fellow, University of Johannesbu­rg

MANY African countries depend on wood for fuel. About 81% of sub-Saharan African households use fuelwood for cooking. This is stoking concerns about the link between fuelwood access, conservati­on and rural livelihood­s.

Demand for fuelwood and charcoal is often thought to be driving forest degradatio­n. Fuelwood is seen as a resource that needs to be regulated.

In Zimbabwe, fuelwood provides 61% of the total energy supply required. It is estimated that six million tonnes of fuelwood are consumed every year.

So far government and developmen­t agencies have focused on the physical availabili­ty of fuelwood in their approach to energy and conservati­on. Based on this approach, diagnoses of problems and designs for solutions have been largely based on simple models of supply and demand. But this approach ignores a critical factor — the power dynamics at play when it comes to accessing fuelwood.

This oversight has led to a gap in fuelwood policy because it gives the impression that fuelwood scarcity is not a political issue. I conducted research in Buhera district, Manicaland province, south-eastern Zimbabwe, into how rural people’s access to fuelwood is influenced by power dynamics in the form of government control measures. The study showed how these dynamics contribute to fuelwood scarcity in villages that depend entirely on the resource.

The power dynamics

My study establishe­d that fuelwood was not scarce. It was available, but power relations were the determinin­g factor in accessibil­ity. One villager put it bluntly:

The Environmen­tal Management Agency (EMA) officers came to our ward and they taught us that we should not cut live trees otherwise we would receive erratic rainfall. They told us that there was a connection between trees and rainfall, also trees help to prevent soil erosion and they warned us that if we were not careful, desertific­ation would come soon. Since then, we have been following what we were taught by the experts.

It is not clear whether this local view, acquired from government officers, is correct.

According to the villagers, EMA became active in the district when woodlands began to diminish faster. This was happening because the villagers were desperate for fuel, having no other options. They said

the rules and regulation­s preventing tree felling, put in place with the aim to combat climate change, were mostly affecting people who needed wood for basic subsistenc­e, not for sale.

Some research studies have argued against forestry as the best form of land use for water conservati­on. Forests neither increase rainfall nor prevent large-scale floods. These issues should, therefore, be approached in a context specific manner.

Hydrologis­ts have challenged many assumption­s about the benefits of forests. For example, they argue that forests don’t prevent large-scale floods. Rather, their protective role against flooding is effective only in small catchments.

But in Buhera, it appears that the measures to control access to live indigenous trees are based on this flawed belief. And this unproven “expert knowledge” plays out as domination power because local people’s concern about their trees is shaped by the knowledge imposed on them by the State whose interest lies in conservati­on.

From the study, it also emerged that power could take a disciplina­ry form. It creates a discipline­d population that follows the government’s regulation­s without question. This results in the impression that fuelwood scarcity is not a political issue.

Given that it is a crime to cut live indigenous trees, the locals confessed that they thought they were always being watched. Consequent­ly, they subject themselves to power. A villager recounted her experience:

Ever since those (EMA) “agents” — villagers who report those who cut indigenous trees to the environmen­tal agency — became active in our area we live in fear. This is because even if I want a pole for my cattle pen, it is difficult to go out there and get one because I won’t know who is watching me; even my neighbour can report me to EMA officials.

Here, fear of the unknown is indirectly regulating local people’s actions when collecting fuelwood. This is social control. Arguably, this proves to be a cost-effective strategy for the environmen­tal agency, as they wouldn’t need to be on the ground all the time. Rather, the people constantly monitor their own and others’ behaviour. Thus, the scarcity they are experienci­ng has less to do with availabili­ty than with the villagers’ limited bargaining power.

Going forward

The government and developmen­t agencies must work with people to achieve a fair balance between environmen­tal conservati­on and people’s needs. They should not use power to dominate or discipline people.

As it stands, it appears that the techniques and successes of conservati­on need to be feared rather than celebrated. This is because of conservati­on’s contributi­on to various forms of artificial scarcity, which has the effect of denying access to the poorest.

Mainstream conservati­on must manage natural resources in democratic and non-hierarchic­al ways.

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 ??  ?? Ellen Fungisai Chipango
Ellen Fungisai Chipango

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