By Olivia Alabaster
BEIRUT: Fairouz first performed “Lebanon the Beautiful Green”
back in 1957, singing, “Lebanon o beautiful green on your hills, My heart’s
story and nostalgia of my mind, O stars that stay up late with me.”
Over half a century later and the landscape of Lebanon is a much
changed vista. Forest coverage has fallen 35 percent in this time and while in
1980 forests still covered 30 percent of the land they now cover just 13
percent.
While Lebanon may be one of the most forested countries in the
region, many factors – from chaotic urban construction to mismanagement, war,
and forest fires – have contributed to the decimation of Lebanon’s green
spaces.
Campaigners have recently increased efforts to protect the
country’s forests, and last week saw the launch of the country’s first ever
national forest strategy, under the auspices of the Agriculture Ministry and in
cooperation with the German Development Cooperation Agency.
Over the course of one year, experts, nongovernmental
organizations, and officials from various ministries and municipalities will
meet with the aim of constructing a National Forest Program – a
first-of-its-kind coherent strategy designed to halt and even reverse
deforestation efforts.
The Agriculture Ministry in 2010 set a 20 percent target for
nationwide forest coverage by 2020: equal to a rather ambitious-sounding
addition of two million new trees each year.
Funded by the U.S. development agency, USAID, and overseen by
the U.S. Forest Service, the Lebanon Reforestation Initiative was launched last
year to help Lebanon reach this target, and Friday inaugurated the start of the
NGO’s fall planting season in Tannourine in north Lebanon, in the presence of
Batroun MP Butros Harb and the U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon, Maura Connelly.
The LRI has now begun planting in five sites around the country,
with plans to plant 120,000 seedlings – representing 25 native species,
including cedar, pine, wild almond, juniper, fir and oak – this year alone.
The focus of the LRI’s work is to “ensure the survivability of
these native trees once they have been planted,” according to Richard Paton,
project director at LRI.
Various reforestation efforts over the years have failed, Paton
said. Looking at previous projects, he said, “One of our major concerns has
been the low rate of survivability of these species once they’re planted.”
Sawsan Bou Fakhreddine, director at the Association for Forests,
Development and Conservation, an NGO working alongside the government to
coordinate the national strategy, explained why so many previous efforts to
re-green Lebanon have not succeeded.
A lack of coordination between various stakeholders has
jeopardized efforts, she said, as has the fact that newly reforested areas are
often soon destroyed by savage summer wildfires.
A lack of knowledge on the ground prevents the correct
preparation and maintenance of seedlings, Bou Fakhreddine added. But, she said,
“The main failure has been because most activities lack of monitoring – you
need to monitor seedlings for several years.”
As such, the LRI is working with local communities on a
grassroots approach to reforestation. Over the last year, in the run up to the
launch of this season’s first planting season, the NGO has been working with
nine native tree nurseries in Lebanon to help them modernize their methods and
promote better practices in terms of how seedlings are planted.
Crucially though, the LRI is working to ensure that the
seedlings “are sufficiently cared for after they are planted, which is up to
three years, with sufficient irrigation, and that they are not damaged through
grazing,” Paton said.
As part of the LRI’s policy of engaging with the local
community, the NGO is aiming to hire 25 people in each of the five sites in
which it is working, from full-time guards on each site to part-time planters
and seasonal workers.
“At the grassroots level, that’s where we think we can have the
most impact,” Paton explained. “To make a difference and promote change from
the bottom up.”
Aside from teaching new methods and employment, the LRI is also
working with local schools and communities to boost awareness of reforestation
efforts, and the benefits that forests provide, from protecting biodiversity
and economic worth.
The NGO is also working alongside the Lebanese Army to highlight
the dangers of forest fires and to help mobilize local volunteer fire fighting
groups.
And while the NGO has funding for four years, Paton hopes that
by 2014 it will become an independent entity capable of bringing in funding,
from private donors, the diaspora and USAID and European partners to help
protect Lebanon’s forests for generations to come.
Nehme Harb, head of the Tannourine Cedar Forest Nature Reserve
Committee, speaking at Friday’s launch, highlighted the importance of Lebanon’s
forests. “The forest stands witness to God’s greatness and the frailty of
people. We have been entrusted with this precious gift and we must preserve
it.”
Bou Fakhreddine, at AFDC, is quietly confident Lebanon can meet
the 2020 target of 20 percent coverage.
“There’s a lot of work still to be done,” she said. But she
believes the National Forest Program will be a key step forward.
At Friday’s launch of LRI’s project, “Bridging the Ancient Cedar
Forests of Tannourine and Bsharri,” Paton recalled comments made by the first
director of the U.S. Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot, over a century ago.
“He invoked
the majesty and threats to the ancient cedars of Lebanon in arguing for the
conservation of forest resources in the United States,” he said.
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2011/Nov-26/155258-lebanon-begins-landmark-reforestation-campaign.ashx#axzz1eXgY1TwC
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