Mahama Ayariga |
The
Minister of Environment Science, Technology and Innovation, Mahama Ayariga has
expressed the urgent need for Ghana to adopt more practical means to protect the country's water bodies from the
effects of climate change.
He
said that managing freshwater bodies in Ghana is currently an urgent and
significant development issue, since most rivers and streams are drying up due
to climate change among others.
Mr.
Mahama Ayariga made the observation in Tamale during the official launch of the
Adaptation Fund Project aimed at building resilience and adaptive capacity of
rural livelihoods to climate variability through improved management of water
resources and diversifying livelihoods in rural communities. The four year
project, spanning 2016 to 2020 is being implemented in ten (10) districts of
the three regions of the North.
The
Minister disclosed that the project would promote four types of adaptation
intervention namely; Livelihood enhancement, Livelihood diversification,
Ecosystem protection and enhancement, and Community level water infrastructure
planning.
According
to him, those approaches would build up financial, natural, physical and social
capital of the beneficiary communities. Adding “About 60, 000 people are
expected to benefit directly from the project, while the entire population in
the Volta River Basin which is estimated to be over 8 million are also to
benefit indirectly.
With
funding from the Adaptation Fund Secretariat and in partnership with UNDP, the project is also to protect major river basins in Northern Ghana for
sustainable livelihoods.
He
said that the Ministry of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation
initiated the Adaptation Fund Project after recognizing the importance of
improving the protection of buffer zones of river basins, enhancing water
access and increasing institutional capacity and coordination for integrated
water management in Ghana.
Mr.
Ayariga mentioned Savelugu, Bole and Zabzugu districts in Northern Region,
Bawku Central, Bongo, Bawku West and Builsa North districts in the Upper East Region and Nandom, Nadowli and Sissala East Districts in the Upper West Region
as beneficiary districts of the four-year project.
He
noted that as part of project implementation strategies, Climate Change
Adaptation Monitoring Committees would be established at the National,
Regional, District and Community levels to monitor the success of the project.
Mr.
Ayariga however urged project implementers to include traditional authorities
and opinion leaders of the communities in these implementation committees. He
further stated that ”the committees are expected to delineate projects
communities along the river basins and of major roads (for demonstration
purposes), provide support to protect them from bushfires, restore and manage
them as community natural resources for livelihood (medicinal value, food,
honey, tourism) and enhancement of ecological functions of the buffer zone
(enhance rainfall, access to water, etc)”.
Polluted River Ankobra |
The
Committees, he said would also intensify capacity building, education, and
training of all stakeholders and ensure their commitment to the conservation of
the buffer zones.
“In addition to this, the project will develop comprehensive management and investment plans for the White and Black Volta and the Oti river basins to take into account climate change impacts and the needed interventions” the Minister added.
On
her part, the UNDP Resident Representative and UN Resident Coordinator,
Christine Evans–Klock said that there was evidence of the pronounced
vulnerability of drought in the three Northern Regions in Ghana.
“For
example, a recent study by the Water Resource Commission reveals that, the
White Volta Basin’s situation has deteriorated from “marginally vulnerable” 25
years ago, back in 1990, to “water stressed” in 2020, and is expected to
deteriorate still further, by 2050, to a situation of “water scarcity”.
She
observed that the local economies and livelihoods in the North remained largely
dependent on rain-fed agriculture, most of which are still on subsistence
scale, with food crops cultivated mostly in only one season.
“Rain
dependence means that farmers suffer significant losses when the rains fail.
The potential for water storage and irrigation systems are high in Northern
Ghana, but this potential has not yet been turned to the advantage of
agricultural productivity and resilience” she explained.
UNDP
Resident Representative said it is against this backdrop, that the government
of Ghana had developed the Adaptation Fund Project. Madam Christine stated that
turning to good use the resources from the Adaptation Fund and technical
assistance from UNDP, the project has been designed to address the decrease in
water availability and the increasingly unpredictability of water resources
that have been induced by climate change and that are increasingly putting in
jeopardy current livelihoods of rural communities in Northern Ghana.
She
revealed the project would target the principal causes of vulnerability
identified in the three regions of the North, and it would deliver support
through improved water resource management planning, that takes into account
the impacts of climate change.
The
project, Madam Christine added will also drive support through grassroot
participation in water management planning and implementation of water resource
management activities at community and district level; and diversification of
livelihoods within local communities as safety nets to climate change impacts.
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