Afrika vil rejse 7.000 km lang “grøn mur” mod Sahara

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Forfatter billede

Stadig oftere tørke, nedslidning af jordlodder og miljøet er ødelæggende faktorer i Sahel-bæltet tværs over Afrika – men hvor man har plantet træer, trives miljøet og dermed de lokale beboere, som kan dyrke afgrøder, de ikke før turde drømme om.

ROME, 16 April 2013 (UN News Service): Stretching from Dakar at the Atlantic to Djibouti at the Red Sea, a United Nations-backed programme dubbed the ‘Great Green Wall’ brings together 11 countries to plant trees across Africa.

The aims is to literally hold back the Sahara desert with a swathe (strækning) of greenery, lessen the effects of desertification and improve the lives and livelihoods of communities.

The Wall, an initiative spearheaded by African heads of State, will stretch about 7.000 kilometres from Senegal in the west to Djibouti in the east and will be about 15 kilometres wide as it traverses the continent, passing through Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Chad, Sudan, Ethiopia and Eritrea.

The programme aims to support the efforts of local communities in the sustainable management and use of forests – a key theme of the tenth session of the UN Forum on Forests (UNFF10), currently taking place in Istanbul – as well as other natural resources in drylands.

Among other things, the planting of trees is expected to provide a barrier against desert winds and will help to hold moisture (fugtighed) in the air and soil, allowing agriculture to flourish.

It is also expected that the Wall will reduce erosion, enhance biodiversity (øge den biologiske mangfoldighed) and improve countries’ resilience (modstandsdygtighed) to climate change.

2/3 af Afrika nu klassificeret som tørt

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), two-thirds of the African continent is classified as desert or drylands.

Climate change has led to

* prolonged periods of drought;
* over-intensive farming and over-grazing causing land degradation; and
* deforestation turning once fertile land into desert in many areas.

Given the multiple roles they perform, forests are perhaps more important in arid (golde /tørre) zones than anywhere else, the agency pointed out.

Forests in arid zones

* are rich in biodiversity which has adapted to extreme ecological conditions;
* provide vital ecosystem goods and services;
* constitute a buffer (stødpude) against drought and desertification;
* offer a safety net against poverty; and
* support adaptation and mitigation (lindring i forhold til) to climate change.

“We are aware that this is our territory. It is up to us to rebuild our systems, that is why we dove in first,” said Ndiawar Dieng, forestry expert and UNFF10 delegate from Senegal, one of the countries that first championed the idea of the Great Green Wall.

Senegal will do “all that is in our power” to solve the problem of desertification, Mr. Dieng added.

Glade folk i “grøn” landsby

Efforts are already paying off in villages such as Widou Thiengoli in Senegal.

Here communities harvest fresh fruits and vegetables (grøntsager) from the dry desert sands, a by-product of the Wall initiative, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) said.

Like many rural communities in Senegal, Widou Thiengoli’s villagers have experienced dramatic changes in climate over the past 25 years, WFP noted.

The frequency of droughts has increased, rainfall levels have fallen by more than one-third and when the rains do finally arrive, many areas are hit by devastating floods.

WFP supports the Great Green Wall programme by providing food assistance for the community farming groups during the lean (magre) season before harvests arrive, helping to build resilience among these communities so that they are better equipped to cope with climate shocks.

“People used to go to towns to seek paid work during the lean season, but since the project started, that has changed,” says Papa Sarr, Technical Director of the National Agency of the Great Green Wall.

“With WFP’s help, they have been able to settle and cultivate this land, and they realize that they can feed themselves and earn money at the same time.”

Mange store miljøforkæmpere stiller op

Supporters of the Great Green Wall also include the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) and the UN-backed Global Environment Facility (GEF) – the largest public funder of projects to improve the environment.

Ulrich Apel, forestry expert with GEF, said that judging from the feedback received so far, the Great Green Wall programme is “off to a promising start.”

He noted that while the GEF has long supported individual countries and farmers with various projects to improve the environment and their living conditions, the Great Green Wall is different owing to the sheer scale of the two billion US dollar (11,4 milliarder DKR) initiative and the amount of coordination involved.

“The most important thing for all projects is that it can show success and results on the ground,” said Mr. Apel, adding.

“As soon as you can show success and results on the ground, it is the best advertisement for funders to come in.”

He stated that the Great Green Wall programme could be replicated in other regions, for example in Central Asia, to address common challenges such as land degradation, water management and mitigating the impacts of climate change.

Se også
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=32238&Cr=senegal&Cr1=#.UW7xlWVqr4s
(Senegal seeks UN backing for ‘Great Green Wall’ across Africa)