Activists plant trees in Mali but residents strip them for firewood.
They say there's no choice
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[November 15, 2024]
By MOUSTAPHA DIALLO
BAMAKO, Mali (AP) — After years of serving as Mali's minister of the
environment, Aida M'bo now spends her time planting trees in a fight
that many in the arid West African country acknowledge they are losing.
“Deforestation is an important issue in Mali,” she said, standing in
front of the Zamblara forest. For decades it has been classified as
protected, but like many forests in the vast Sahel, it could be wiped
out.
“It is mainly due to the excessive wood-cutting,” M'bo said.
Even some of her fellow tree-planters that day were to blame. Salimata
Diabate, who took part in the ceremony last month, lives nearby and
sells firewood from the forest in the Sikasso region, long considered
Mali’s breadbasket.
While Diabate expressed concern about the threats to Mali’s forests, she
said people like her in the countryside have no choice but firewood for
cooking.
“Things like cooking gas and solar panels are better, but it’s too
expensive for rural women,” she said.
The loss of forests has become a pressing issue across Africa as the
Sahara Desert continues to creep southward. Over the last three decades,
nearly 7,722 square miles (20,000 square kilometers) of forest have been
lost in Mali, according to the environmental nonprofit Tree Aid.
M'bo's nonprofit, Energia, is financially supported by the Great Green
Wall, an initiative by African countries launched in 2007 that aims to
plant trees in a nearly 5,000-mile line across the continent, creating a
natural barrier to hold back the desert as climate change sweeps the
sands south.
But millions of the trees died as temperatures rose and rainfall
diminished. As a result, only 4% of the Great Green Wall’s original goal
has been met, and an estimated $43 billion would be needed to achieve
the rest.
In Mali, the initiative is facing an additional challenge : the
population’s dependency on firewood.
Lassana Coulibaly, who lives in the town of Senou near the capital,
Bamako, spends his days chopping up and reselling wood he buys from
people who cut it from a nearby forest.
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People plant trees in the Zamblara forest in Mali's Sikasso region
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024, as part of a campaign with Malian NGO
Energia, a partner of the Great Green Wall initiative. (AP Photo/Moustapha
Diallo)
“This how we make a living on a daily basis,” he said. He doesn’t
believe the forest will disappear.
A 2019 study by the African Energy Commission found that 64% of
Mali’s total fuel consumption was of biomass, primarily firewood and
charcoal for household use. Their sale remains legal.
Despite being one of Africa’s top gold producers, Mali ranks among
the world's least developed nations, with almost half of its 23
million population living below the national poverty line. The
problem is worse in rural areas, where subsistence farming — many
people's only real option for survival — is threatened by armed
conflict and climate change.
The country has been plagued by an insurgency fought by armed
groups, including some allied with al-Qaida and the Islamic State
group, and two military coups since 2020.
Mali is also among several countries in the Sahel that have
experienced record-breaking floods this year, with more than 1,000
people killed and hundreds of thousands displaced across the region.
Khady Camara, an environmental activist based in Senegal, said
forests can help to weather the effects of climate change by
absorbing water to prevent floods, and by absorbing carbon that
would otherwise end up in the atmosphere as part of heat-trapping
gas.
“We need to give more priority to our forests, but we also need to
set up new forests and give priority to natural regeneration,” said
Camara, whose organization Vacances Vertes has planted 150,000 trees
in Senegal.
She said the effects of climate change on the Sahel region can’t be
overstated, and the causes often come from far beyond the African
continent.
“ Africa produces only 3% of greenhouse gases. Ninety percent is
from the West,” she said. “If we continue like this, I’m saying to
myself that this will be the disappearance of Africa, and of
Africans.”
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