BFF-08,09 In Mozambique, a joint fight against climate change and forest loss

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In Mozambique, a joint fight against climate change and forest loss

GILE, Mozambique, July 23, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – From a distance, the Gile
National Reserve in northern Mozambique is a vast, dense ocean of green that
reaches as far as the horizon.

Bigger than Luxembourg, the 2,800-square-kilometre (1,080-square-mile)
forest seems to be reassuringly preserved, its hardwood treasure placed by
Mozambique under legal protection.

Close up though, the forest bears deep scars from bouts of rampant logging
and relentless population growth — a testimony to the real-life challenge of
how to shield this jewel.

Logs line the path leading into the reserve, while further along, trucks
piled high with wood shavings, seized by the authorities, stand idle, rusting
in the weeds.

“Illegal logging was a huge problem between 2014 and 2016,” said reserve
manager Jose Mohamede Dias.

“The other challenge is the bushfires used in hunting and agriculture which
feed local people.”

Such blazes are the main reason for the forest’s shrinkage in recent years,
he explained.

Local people burn down swathes of forest to open up arable land. Once the
fields become exhausted, the farmers burn down more trees, and so on.

The reserve’s population, currently more than 10,000, has shot up in recent
years, putting immense pressure on the ecosystem.

Some seven million hectares (17 million acres) of tropical forests go up in
smoke every year worldwide, according to a UN estimate.

– Decompose and fertilise –

In a bid to stop the ravaging of the forest, French environmental group
Nitidae is offering practical, low-tech help to small farmers on how to use
the land more sustainably.

One beneficiary is Alexandre Soares, who enrolled a year ago in a training
scheme on how to cope with drought and retain soil fertility.

“They explained that I should leave certain trees in place to balance the
ecosystem. Their leaves decompose and fertilise the soil for the next
season,” he said, wearing a white hat as he tended his plot under the baking
sun.

Nitidae specialist Dinis Augusto looked at Soares’ mix of crops, which
include corn, cassava and beans.

“Mixing these plants allows us to guarantee the viability of the soil so
the farmers can spend more time on the plot and won’t need to find new land,”
he said.

The advice from the pilot project has slowly spread through surrounding
communities and improved crop yields — a powerful inducement for others to
follow the tips.

– Better charcoal ovens –

As well as logging and man-made bushfires, the reserve has also been
targeted for the manufacture of charcoal — the main heat source in many
homes in the region.

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Luis Aghostino set up a basic charcoal oven, digging at the ground barefoot
and wearing blue overalls beside several tightly stacked logs, covered in
straw and earth.

With simple modifications like improved ventilation, the oven is capable of
making more charcoal of higher quality and requiring less wood.

“It doesn’t cost any more, the materials are exactly the same and it
doesn’t take any more time,” said Nitidae’s Alexandre Tregoures.

“With this amount of wood, we can produce seven bags of charcoal whereas we
were only able to produce two or three before,” added Aghostino.

Between 10 and 15 percent of greenhouse gas emissions worldwide come
through deforestation, which releases carbon, locked in the soil for
millennia, into the atmosphere.

Forests, on the other hand, are carbon “sinks” — in growing, they take
carbon dioxide out of the air and sequestrate it.

The Gile reserve is hoping to cash in on its conservation efforts by
offering carbon credits under a UN-supported programme called REDD+, for
Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation, which seeks to tackle
forest loss and combat global warming at the same time.

The local scheme is financed by the French Fund for the World Environment
(FFEM) in collaboration with the Mozambican government.

Satellite imaging and forest inventories mean it is possible to monitor the
rate at which the forest is shrinking.

“Between 2010 and 2016, we witnessed a decrease in deforestation in the
reserve’s buffer zone — greenhouse gas emissions were avoided,” said
Nitidae’s country manager, Jean-Baptiste Roelens.

The scheme has reduced carbon emissions by 300,000 tonnes over five years,
with each tonne saved credited at a rate of between $5 (4.30 euros) and $8 a
tonne on the international market for carbon dioxide (CO2).

The credits will net the reserve between $2 million and $3 million — the
windfall will be reinvested locally, “to finance sustainable development and
support environmental projects,” said Roelens.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0947 hrs