Drought adds fuel to fire as Zambia loses battle to save forests
25
February, 2016
LIVINGSTONE,
Zambia (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Bare-chested, Alan Siyampondo
shovels soil onto a smoking kiln stuffed with burning teak wood to
produce a batch of charcoal in the heart of Dambwa Forest Reserve
outside Livingstone.
Nearby
in the savannah woodland close to Zambia's southern border, another
man prepares to turn his chopped logs into charcoal.
Despite
concerted efforts to reduce deforestation, this season's poor
rainfall - influenced by the El Niño weather phenomenon – is
causing food and power shortages that could force more Zambian
villagers to turn to the forests for fuel and income.
Sweating,
Siyampondo takes a break from carving up the third teak tree he has
felled in a week. After three days of toil, he hopes to fill at least
nine 50 kg bags with charcoal blocks made from the red-colored wood.
“I
have a garden at home, but the crops are small, so I have to do what
I can or we will face hunger,” he said.
A
bag of charcoal sells for 25 kwacha (around $2.50) in Livingstone,
but the price is much higher in neighboring Zimbabwe and Namibia.
Dambwa
Forest has been a protected area since 1972, and unlicensed charcoal
makers are banned from making or selling the wood-derived fuel. But
it is an entrenched cultural practice.
According
to U.N. data, Zambia has one of the world's highest deforestation
rates per capita. The Forestry Department estimates that 250,000
hectares to 300,000 hectares (617,800 to 741,300 acres) of forest are
cleared each year. This is mainly due to illegal tree cutting,
agriculture, charcoal production and human settlement.
A
2015 report from the U.N. Environment Programme said Zambia's forest
ecosystems contribute an annual $1.3 billion to the economy, roughly
6 percent of gross domestic product.
Hardwood
trees such as teak, mopane and mukusi are used in furniture-making
and construction, while some timber is exported.
And
with drought harming crop yields across southern Africa, officials
say food insecurity and the struggling economy are pushing more
people to cut down trees.
POWER
CUTS
Food
prices in Zambia’s southwestern maize belt have risen, according to
the Famine Early Warning Systems Network. Meanwhile, the National
Disaster Management Council of Ministers has warned that strong El
Niño impacts could leave around 1.6 million people in need of food
aid - double the current level.
“There
is a definite increase in the exploitation of the forest by the rural
folk because of the poor rains,” said Victor Chiiba, forestry
overseer for Southern Province.
“There's
a market for charcoal so those who have not reaped (a good harvest)
are increasingly turning to other activities to make an income.”
Some
environmental activists also attribute growing demand for charcoal to
severe power shortages. Erratic rains have dented Zambia's
hydro-electric output so much that long daily power cuts have become
the norm.
“Everyone
here is using charcoal - even the hotels are using it because of
these power cuts, and there is growing demand for cheap fuel. If this
carries on we are really going to lose our forests one day,” said
Benjamin Mudenge who works with Greenpop, a South Africa-based social
enterprise that holds an annual tree-planting festival in
Livingstone.
Since
it was set up in 2010, Greenpop says more than 14,000 trees have been
planted in Zambia through its community and school awareness
programs.
At
the same time, there is concern that climate change has altered
Zambia's deciduous miombo woodlands. The growing period for some
species has been extended by up to 30 years, and Chiiba fears that
raises the risk of older forests being cut down.
VOLUNTEER
RANGERS
In
an effort to combat the upsurge in logging, the Southern forestry
department has persuaded some villages in the region to adopt local
by-laws that encourage tree regeneration.
“We
advocate for people to leave at least 1.5 hectares of their land
uncultivated to allow a small forest to develop,” Chiiba explained.
In
addition to radio and community outreach programs that raise
awareness about the importance of planting and protecting trees,
local activists have set up a volunteer ranger network.
At
least 15 people from Livingstone and the villages surrounding the
forest regularly patrol Dambwa alongside officers tasked with
protecting the park and its wildlife.
But
Wonder Kandenge, a volunteer ranger, told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation that while villagers support forest patrols, they were
inadequately equipped for the task.
“We
are a small group and we're trying to reduce cutting and burning, but
much more can be done. We need more resources,” Kandenge said. “We
are unarmed when we go to the forest and we meet people carrying
pangas (big knives) and axes chopping down trees. How can we stop
someone like that?”
On
top of limited resources, drought has made the challenge of curbing
deforestation in Zambia's woodlands even tougher.
The
brief rains that showered the southern belt in recent weeks are
unlikely to bring an end to the freshly hacked stumps and smoldering
fires lining Dambwa's dusty paths – especially with elections
coming up in August.
"We
try and educate the village headmen and the people, but when the
politicians come and campaign for votes, they tell the people they
can cut the trees - and since we can't confront the politicians, we
can't stop the people," said Kandenge.
(Reporting by Tendai Marima; editing by Megan Rowling. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org)
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