As part of the implementation of a
climate change resilience project by the Zasilari Ecological Farms Projects
[ZEFP] in five communities in the West Mamprusi District of the Northern Region
of Ghana, a wide-range of eco-friendly measures have been rolled out to enable
residents there adapt to climate change vulnerability effects.
Dubbed “Expanding Climate Change Resilience in Northern Ghana
(ECCRING)” and funded by CIDA and the Canadian
Hunger Foundation (CHF) and implemented by the Association of Church-Based
Development NGOs (ACDEP) in collaboration with ZEFP, the 15-month project is
aimed at combating desertification and deforestation problems in all fronts and
also addressing food security challenges of beneficiary communities. This
effort would also contribute to the global climate
change mitigation efforts through carbon sequestration.
According to the Project Coordinator
Issifu Sulemana Jobila in an interview with Savannahnews,
the five communities which included Zangum, Sayoo, Nayoku, Guakudow and
Guabuliga received a total of 140,000 seedlings to establish 50 acre forest
plantations each in their respective localities.
The seedlings, made up of fruit
trees such as grafted mangoes which start producing within a short period of
time, he explained, would eventually address food and nutritional security
problems of the people as well as provide income for their families if planted
and properly taken care of.
He also noted for instance that,
other tree seedlings such as acacia, teak, lucinia, moringa, kapok and
mahogany were to be planted for the purposes of enriching the ecology
(natural environment) of the various communities, provide residents with
woodlots for building and other forms of construction, fodder for their
ruminants and also serve as medicinal/herbal purposes in future.
Mr. Jobila further
disclosed that efforts were being made by ZEFP to rehabilitate major rivers and
the basic school buildings in the Sayoo community for instance, through some
afforestation programmes so that they could help protect buildings and other
structures against rainstorms as part of the ongoing efforts to strengthen the
community’s resilience against climate change impacts.
The ECCRING project is expected
to support women and other vulnerable
farmers in Northern Ghana to enable them to adapt to increasingly erratic
rainfall and rising temperatures. The project seeks to build on earlier
successes in the area by expanding into 18 new rural communities to increase
crop harvests and augment incomes amongst families.
The project would raise awareness of the negative impacts of
climate change and how they could be reduced, and would build the capacity of
regional organizations, districts, communities and beneficiaries to address
climate change effects and manage natural disasters. New farming methods and
technologies would also be introduced to increase the use of drought-resistant
crops and improve livestock production methods.
So far, 1,000 individual smallholder farmers; 200 people from
each of the five communities have been supported with 2,080 climate change
resilient goats to rear.
10,000 vulnerable rural women and men in the 18 communities
including the aforementioned would receive direct support, and the project is
expected to benefit approximately 50,000 people in total whereas household food
security and income are both expected to increase by 35% over the 15 month
period of the project implementation.
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