Globally,
forest and trees contribute significantly to the very survival of people and
the planet.
Literature also has that forest and trees further create the necessary environment for clean
air and water as well as conserving biodiversity and responding to climate
change.
Additionally, it is also on records that Forest acts as sources of food, medicine and
fuel for more than a billion people in the world.
Speaking to the Radio Ghana
at durbar of chiefs held at the Tongo community in the Talensi District of the Upper East
Region involving Tindanas( custodians of
the land) and Partners of the Talensi
Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration FMNR known as “Tintuug Legbe Tiig” in the
local parlance.
The Project Manager
Samuel Abasiba explained that The Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration FMNR is a
World Vision International land restoration technique.
He explained further that the concept is a low cost land restoration technique that
combats poverty and hunger among subsisting farmers by increasing food, timber
reproduction and resilience to climate extremes.
It involves organized re-growth and
management of trees and shrubs from felled tree stumps, and sprouting root
systems.
He pointed out that the aim of
the project is to improve house hold food security and resilience among the
people in the district, through improvement of the environmental conditions
using the FMNR concept.
Mr Abasiba
indicated that, the project has, introduced a number of sound environmental
management and Good Agricultural Practices (GAPS), based on available local
knowledge and local context to address environmental management issues
constraining on-farm food production and post-harvest loses.
He stated that,
the project delivery approach has nurtured the participation of all key
stakeholders, community leaders, farmers in the Talensi Distirct and its
relevant agencies such as schools, religious bodies, Non-Governmental
Organizations NGOs and Community Based Organizations CBOs to constantly review
strategies for FMNR, scaling up and adaption to local context.
On the uptake of
FMNR, Abasiba stated that, the project has trained about One thousand 200 lead farmers in 57
communities on the FMNR technique, who has adopted the practice and have
restored seven hundred and 50 hectares of degraded lands and a further One
thousand 500 hectares of FMNR on farmlands.
He said their intervention has help
reduce bush fires, increase soil fertility, crops and livestock production,
Beekeeping, access to credit value chain development advocacy against expensive
funeral.
The challenges he stressed, still remains bush fires, felling of
trees, surface mining and expensive funerals and festivals.
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