SUSTAINABLE MEASURES ACTIVATED TO PROTECT LAKE BOSOMTWE
A group photograph of some of the farmers, project partners |
Pursuant to this, selected catchment
communities of the lake are being empowered with sustainable alternative
livelihood to reduce over dependence and excessive exploitation of the lake.
One of the farmers(left) being honoured for hardwork |
They
are to transfer the new superior farming technologies to about two thousand
others within their environs.
The 20-month climate mitigating project saw the brain behind it, A Rocha Ghana, an indigenous environmentally concerned non-governmental organization, team up with the Crops Research Institute, CRI of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research take the beneficiary farmers through both classroom and practical training in best agricultural practices such as rapid mini propagation of plantain, strip cropping, mini set technologies using climate adaptation approaches.
The farmers were as well taken through composting and organic-based chemical preparation using plants such as neem tree with the ultimate aim of discouraging the application of harmful chemicals in farming as well as some international collaborators like the Global Climate Change Alliance.
The
Programmes Manager of A Rocha, Mr. Prosper Antwi, explained to Ashanti Today that,
the main target is to prevent polluting the lake and life inside it.
“In a
long term, we’re going to see that both biodiversity within the catchment is
going to be enhanced and we’re going to have a very good lake in that, when
you’re farming and you’re using inorganic like weedicide and other forms of
fertilizers and all that, what happens is that, during rains, erosion take
place, it affects the quality and the status of the lake, which in the long
term, have an effect on the health situation of the people”, he
explained.
The
latest and most comprehensive study ever to have been conducted on the water
resource by a team of both local and foreign scientists from Ghana’s reputable
universities has established that while the volume of water in the lake has
seen a consistent recession due to the harsh effects of the climate which has
also resulted in the loss of fish species in it from 11 in the 1970s to five
presently, the number of people who heavily relied on it for household income
and protein needs has substantially reduced from 84 per cent to 27 percent
during the same period thereby pushing inhabitants of the 24 surrounding
villages of the lake into migration and other means of fending for themselves
and their families, regardless of the impact on the sustainability of the lake.
The
farmers were additionally provided with regular information on the weather by
the Ghana Meteorological Agency, one of the partners, to enable them determine
what activity to do on their respective farms at any point in time during the
training. One of the beneficiary
farmers, 51-year old Akwasi Owusu, who confirmed his involvement in activities
on the lake for many years, noted that, he and his colleagues have also been
provided other materials that will help protect the lake from direct effects of
the weather.
He
said “I am a fisherman. I have also a farm just along the lake. When A Rocha
came in, they have given us tree seedlings to plant to plant along the shores
of the lake to protect the lake against direct sunshine that could cause it to
dry up.”
As it with every meaningful project, the
farmers and implementing partners organize periodic evaluation sessions to
assess the work done so as to learn lessons that will guide the future of the
initiative. One participating farmers, Opanin Isaac Debrah from Atafram shared
his experience with the project so far.
Opanin
Debrah disclosed “I now have my composite ready for application during the January
farming season. I have about 500 of the new plantain suckers and yams. Through
the new farming technology learnt, I am now able to increase my yield and
profit as income.”
A
Principal Technologist at the Crops Research Institute, Mrs. Mary Otiwaa
Asante, one of the key resource persons on the project, while commending the
farmers for their commitment and acceptance of the new technologies, disclosed
that the Climate Resilience for Bosomtwe’s Smallholder Farmers project has now
gained international recognition.Mrs. Mary Otiwaa Asante-Principal Technologist, CRI & Resource Person on the project
“The
farmers have been very cooperative and successful. They opted for us to work on
their own field and they didn’t charge us a penny. While working on it, they
voluntarily do the labour work and learnt through the on-farm demonstrations
and farmer schools. That has also made the small project win an award the COP
level in Egypt as the Best Smallholder Farmer Demonstration”, the
Principal Technologist said with amidst a smile.
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