Audio By Carbonatix
The much-awaited Green Ghana Day will come off tomorrow, Friday, June 9, 2023, across the country.
The exercise will ensure the planting of 10 million seedlings.
The Green Ghana Day was launched by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in 2021 under the auspices of the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, as part of an aggressive afforestation and reforestation agenda of the government.
The initiative is intended to restore the lost forest cover of the country devastated by illegal small-scale mining and timber logging.
The maiden edition targeted to plant five million trees, but ended up planting over seven million seedlings.
In 2022, more than 26 million trees were planted, exceeding the 20 million target.
The Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II officially launched this year’s edition of the Green Ghana Day on Wednesday, May 17 at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, urging all well-meaning Ghanaians to support the tree planting exercise.
The revered King said the Day presented an opportunity for Ghanaians to show patriotism and commitment towards protecting the country’s forest cover and leave the younger generation a much richer and greener Ghana.
“Government cannot do it alone. We must all get involved and support Government to come to grips with these matters,” Otumfuo Osei Tutu said.
The Asantehene pledged to lead his chiefs and people to plant 2.5 million trees to protect the enclave of Lake Bosomtwe in the Bosomtwe District of the Region.
The Government since 2017 has been taking several measures to restore the country’s lost forest cover, hence the Green Ghana Project is a necessary intervention to create national awareness of the necessity for collective action towards the restoration of the degraded landscapes.
The programme also aims at inculcating values of planting and nurturing of trees in the citizens, particularly among the younger generation, to mitigate the negative effects of climate change as well as beautifying the environment.
Averagely, more than 81 percent of the seedlings planted in 2021 survived while 72 per cent survived in 2022.
Latest Stories
-
IndigoHomes showcases green vision with tree planting at GreenwichPark
23 seconds -
What Ananse knew about the web before AI existed — and why Ghana must govern it now
2 minutes -
AI in Lending: Progress, risks, and the governance imperative
7 minutes -
We must move beyond politics — Weija-Gbawe MP demands use of completed health facility
17 minutes -
Akosombo, Ghana National Research Fund, and the imperative of investing in national capacity
20 minutes -
Weija-Gbawe MP frustrated over delayed opening of completed children’s hospital
23 minutes -
BoG not meant to make profit – Majority defends losses
52 minutes -
BoG losses must not be interpreted through narrow commercial banking lens – Eric Afful
53 minutes -
Gap co-founder Doris Fisher dies aged 94
58 minutes -
Climate Evidence: Chorkor fishmongers trapped between livelihood and harmful smoke exposure
1 hour -
Roads Minister completes tour of Savannah, Upper West projects, assures timely delivery
1 hour -
Ministry of Labour signs partnership with Instead to tackle youth unemployment
1 hour -
Majority criticises Akufo-Addo gov’t over failure to achieve stability despite BoG losses
1 hour -
The Case for Henry Nana Boakye as Vice Chair of the New Patriotic Party
1 hour -
Majority defends BoG losses, says they reflect cost of economic stabilisation
1 hour