Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

***The views expressed in the articles published on this website DO NOT necessarily express the views of the Commercial Farmers' Union.***

No trees in 50 years

No trees in 50 years

http://www.thezimbabwean.co.uk/

Time to take action
16.11.1101:27pm
by Fungai Kwaramba Harare

A cocktail of power cuts, ad hoc deforestation and veld fires has seen the 
loss of 330 000 hectares of trees annually, while Forestry Commission 
sapling nurseries wither through lack of investment from the cash-strapped 
parastatal.

Philip Mataranyika, from Friends of the Environment, told The Zimbabwean 
this week that the current rate of deforestation could see the complete 
destruction of trees in just 52 years. The Friends plan to raise awareness 
of the importance of trees by walking from Harare to the Eastern Highlands 
on November 27 – December 2.

“Our situation is desperate. Factor in the debilitating power cuts and you 
have a cocktail for disaster,” said Mataranyika.

Since the land reform programme began, Zimbabwe has been losing trees at an 
accelerated pace as new farmers, particularly the 62,000 small-scale tobacco 
producers, use firewood as a source of energy. It takes 11kg of firewood to 
cure 1kg of tobacco and small-scale farmers are producing an average of 1,5 
tons a year. Others cut wood for resale in light of frequent power cuts.

“A quick drive on our national highways will give you an indication of how 
far we have gone in using wood as an energy source. Creating nurseries in 
rural communities is vital if people in the rural areas are to replenish 
their energy sources, preserve the environment and restore our rural 
beauty,” added Mataranyika.

Alarmed at the trend of deforestation, some tobacco companies have started 
re-forestation nurseries. Farmers contracted to them are required to replace 
all the trees they use by planting saplings every year. However, only 12,000 
tobacco farmers have signed up to the initiative.

Friends of the Environment intend to plant millions trees in the next 20 
years to replenish the dwindling forests.

“I am happy to report that we received a resounding yes from Zimbabweans 
across the economic, cultural and social divide and now we are now at the 
implementation stage. It is a collective responsibility to get Zimbabwe 
green again,” he said.

With the Forestry Commission struggling to maintain existing forests and 
plant new ones, Mataranyika said the corporate world should adopt trees.

“Our plan is to get Corporate Zimbabwe to adopt all the nurseries, and I can 
tell you the buy in has been tremendous. We plan to create another 52 
nurseries by 2015 to bring the total to a hundred. This will build capacity 
to 500 000 seedlings per year and ultimately 500 million trees should be 
planted by 2025,” he said.

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