Audio By Carbonatix
A research conducted by Tropenbos Ghana has revealed that cocoa farming encroachment in Krokosua Hills, Sui River and Tano Offin Forest Reserves (FRs), has resulted in a 700% rate of deforestation within 2 decades.
The study which was published on Wednesday, stated that Ghana stands to lose more forest cover in the next five years if “a business as usual approach” persists.
Interacting with the media, the Tropenbos National Project Coordinator, Daniel Kofi Abu, indicated that authority often ignores the alarming effects of the actions of the cocoa farmers because of how essential the commodity is to the country’s revenue.
“This is unacceptable; we cannot allow our greed and our own selfish interest to drive us into finishing our forest reserves,” he stated.
The research titled “Drastic changes are needed in the cocoa sector to halt deforestation in Ghana” by Tropenbos Ghana, a forest and trees focused organisation, is to identify the issues and suggest measures to address the situation.
Read the full report below:
The Project Coordinator was of the view that cocoa farmers and landowners could effectively utilise a little piece of land and produce enough cocoa beans without eating into the three FRs.
“Here, we do not practice proper intensification, so naturally farmers think that the way forward is for them to expand especially given that most of the forest looks virgin. And that is where the problem is,” he emphasised.
He, therefore, called on government, chiefs and major stakeholders to form local committees who will discourage farmers from encroaching on forest reserves.
“We want government to review statuses of the forest reserves, management regimes and plans to preserve the FRs,” he noted.
Mr Abu further attributed deforestation on FRs to population growth, agriculture expansion, illegal logging, fuel wood, illegal mining and mineral exploitation and urged the private sectors to fund activities relating to forest restoration.
Tropenbos Ghana is a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) implementing a European Union (EU) project of “strengthening the capacities of non-state actors to improve Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade, Voluntary Partnership Agreement (FLEGT-VPA) and Reducing Emission from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) in West Africa.
Latest Stories
-
Willie Colón, trombonist who pioneered salsa music, dies aged 75
20 minutes -
Guardiola tells team to chill with cocktails as Man City pile pressure on Arsenal
22 minutes -
Majority blasts Minority over Burkinabe border bloodbath claims
2 hours -
Analyst says Burkina Faso killings were a calculated signal to Ghana
2 hours -
Veep extends Ramadan greetings, donates to Cape Coast Central Mosque
3 hours -
UBIDS secures $6.6m prefabricated classroom complex to end space deficit
5 hours -
Gold Fields Ghana Foundation deepens childhood cancer awareness drive; invests $4.8m in community health
5 hours -
Iran students stage first large anti-government protests since deadly crackdown
5 hours -
Fire guts Saboba Hospital’s Children Ward
6 hours -
Interior Ministry extends aptitude test dates for WASSCE applicants in 2025/26 security services recruitment
7 hours -
National Investment Bank donates GH₵1m to support GAF barracks redevelopment project
7 hours -
Gomoa-East demolition: 14 suspects remanded by Kasoa Ofaakor Court
8 hours -
Divers recover bodies of seven Chinese tourists from bottom of Lake Baikal
9 hours -
From windstorm to resilience: How Wa school is growing climate protection
10 hours -
Reclaiming the Garden City: Dr. Kwame Adinkrah urges Kumasi to rein in billboard proliferation
10 hours
