Environment

How Greed Is Destroying Afrikan Environments And Ecosystems

A Lesotho environmental law expert says it is alarmingly troubling that the once pristine African land continues to be sacrificed at the altar of profits by multinational companies extracting the continent’s minerals for financial gains. 

Advocate Borenahabokhethe Sekonyela says allowing multinational companies to dirty the African environment and its ecosystems with impunity is a violation of fundamental African customary laws that seek to protect the land. 

“The multinational companies are clearly maximizing profits at the cost of life in Africa,” Advocate Sekonyela said. 

He says fundamental principles of African customary laws dictate that Africans have full rights to their land and all natural resources beneath that land, including copper in Zambia, diamonds in Lesotho, and coal in Malawi. 

“Africans have full land rights protected by customary laws. Customarily, land is an important asset for Africans. In terms of farming, if one does not own a farm but has cattle, there was a butter system arrangement in place to ensure that we all benefit from that land. This was a fundamental economic theory of our African custom. 

“The same principle should apply even in mines because God placed Africans there with all those resources and there should have been an equity share in those resources but that is not the case because African governments have leased out mining areas to multinational companies who are sacrificing our land at the altar of profits,” Advocate Sekonyela said. 

He said the expectation that mining companies must conduct their businesses in such a way that even future African generations will benefit from their resources is slowly becoming an unrealistic dream. 

“Do it in such a way that you do not destroy my land because it is for my benefit and those that will come after me,” he said. 

Zambians Look to South Africa for Justice

A South African high court is expected to pronounce itself on whether or not it has jurisdiction to preside over a landmark class action lawsuit against Anglo American mine in the coming months.  

This was after 14 Zambian women and children alleged in court papers that Anglo American “massively” polluted their land when it operated and managed a mine in Kabwe, Zambia between 1925 and 1974. 

According to Amnesty International and South African Litigation Centre, the 14 Zambian applicants are acting on behalf of “an estimated 100,000 children and women, who report suffering injury from lead exposure as a result of century-long mineral extraction near their homes.”

The applicants want the South African high court to order Anglo American to compensate them for alleged breach of what Zambians have identified as a “duty of care to protect existing and future generations of residents of Kabwe against the risks of lead pollution arising from the Mine’s operations.”

Amnesty International’s Director for East and Southern Africa, Deprose Muchena, has likened this case to a biblical story of “David vs Goliath case and a significant, long-overdue step towards justice for the people of Kabwe, who have suffered from lead poisoning for years due to the mining activities of multinational corporations in their communities.”

Anglo American has been previously quoted in the media saying “we do intend to defend ourselves because we do not believe that we are responsible for the current situation.”

In an interview with Ubuntu Times this month, Advocate Sekonyela warned that the Zambian case was just a drop in the ocean, saying there were thousands of Africans experiencing serious health complications caused by effects of mining pollution. 

“Mining dirties water and it does not matter if you were an imperialist or not, I have a riparian right to drink clean water and any type of development should not jeopardize my right to access clean water,” Advocate Sekonyela said.

Lesotho Government Investigates Water Pollution 

In March this year, Lesotho’s Ministry of Natural Resources said it is investigating allegations of water pollution by Letseng Diamonds Mine, Storm Mountain Diamonds and Liqhobong Diamond Mine. 

The Ministry of Natural Resources wishes to acknowledge and notes with concern the various articles that have appeared in the Lesotho and South African press recently concerning the alleged pollution of above-average concentration of nitrates in certain rivers that flow into the Katse Dam,” read a press statement circulated on 1st March 2023. 

“The validity of the allegations are being investigated and in addition to having instructed the Department of Water Affairs to report to the Minister of Natural Resources Honourable Mohlomi Moleko, on the allegations.”

Mine tailings at Letseng Diamonds Mine in Lesotho
Mine tailings form plateaus in rural district of Mokhotlong, Lesotho. Patising and Maloraneng communities suspect that these tailing and water seepages are responsible for blue, toxic water they regularly spot in two streams originating from the mine. The mine was previously a beautiful lake in Mokhotlong, Lesotho. Credit: Retselisitsoe Khabo

Government’s investigations come after MNN Centre for Investigative Journalism published a story that the Lesotho Highlands Development Agency (LHDA), an agency monitoring and managing the Lesotho Highlands Water Project, said mines pollution of critical water sources continues unabated despite the mines’ repeated promises to mitigate contamination during joint meetings chaired by the department of environment.  

According to the LHDA, the three mines polluting rivers critical to the water project that transfers water to South Africa are Letšeng Diamonds Mine, Storm Mountain Diamonds and Liqhobong Diamond Mine. 

Communities downstream Letšeng Diamonds Mine and Storm Mountain Diamonds have accused the two mines of polluting their water courses with impunity, an accusation the two mines hotly deny. Letseng Diamonds Mine is co-owned by Lesotho government (30 percent) and British-based Gem Diamonds (70 percent). 

Since it started operating the mine in 2004, Letšeng states on its website that it has discovered precious stones such as a 910-carat Lesotho Legend (2018); 603-carat Lesotho Promise (2006), 550-carat Letšeng Star (2011), 493-carat Letšeng Legacy (2007) and the 478-carat Light of Letšeng (2008). Collectively, the mine made US$81.2 million (M1.2 billion) from four of those five stones.

Storm Mountain Diamonds’ shareholding is held by the Lesotho government (25 percent) and South Africa’s Namakwa Diamonds (75 percent). Storm Mountain Diamonds’ website states that the mine’s 3.06-carat Kao Purple Princess was sold at US$727, 898. 

Coal, Uranium Mines Leave Trail of Destruction in Malawi

The Malawi Economic Justice Network (MEJN) says communities around coal and uranium mining areas in that country “face a lot of challenges with water pollution”.

The Network’s Program Officer, Bertha Phiri has accused the Malawian government of “…not doing enough in protecting the rights and livelihood of people living in mining communities.”

“The law is clear on issues of Environmental Impact Assessment and all its related issues but the biggest challenge is laxity in the enforcement of the law. People living around coal and uranium mining areas face a lot of challenges with water pollution and their land is also affected in terms of productivity and farming let alone their health is at risk as well,” Phiri told Ubuntu Times last week.

Phiri is positive that Malawi should learn from the Zambian lead poisoning and argues that Malawi could have enacted a far much better, inclusive Mines and Mineral Act, 2018 had it taken suggestions from community representatives on board. 

“The mines and Minerals Act went through a very rigorous process as far as consultations with relevant stakeholders are concerned. However, consultations do remain consultations up until when all the issues, concerns and suggestion that are brought forward are taken on board. 

“Our observation is that Malawi missed an opportunity to address its issues and bring sanity in the mining sector learning from the bad experiences we have had with Kayerekera Uranium Mining. So the enactment of the Mines and Minerals Act would have taken on board lessons learnt which in MEJN’s view did not to the large extent besides stakeholders raising the issues during the consultations,” Phiri said. 

Oil Money Heralds Trouble For Uganda’s Indigenous Bagungu Tribe, Environment

BULIISA, Uganda — Baboons wander through shrub-lands that line the sides of newly built roads straddling Uganda’s wildlife reserves close to the shores of oil-rich Lake Albert. Across the border in Congo,  magnificent lush green hilly countrysides stand out. If you’re lucky you can catch a glimpse of elephants too. Wildlife is abundant here, but such scenes might be no more in a few years, as oil companies embark on multi-billion projects to pump as much as 6 billion barrels of crude oil from Uganda’s biodiversity-rich Albertine Rift Graben.

Baboons crossing the newly built Hoima-Buliisa road in Buliisa District
Baboons crossing the newly built Hoima-Buliisa road that straddles Bugungu wildlife reserve close to the shores of oil-rich Lake Albert. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

This territory has also been occupied for generations by the indigenous Bagungu people, who tilled the land to cultivate millet and sorghum and gather medicinal herbs and fish on Lake Albert. The Bagungu have over the years used traditional techniques to conserve the lands. From restricting access to sacred areas to designating wildlife sanctuaries, owing in part to a traditional belief that nature and its resources are guarded by spirits.

But planned development of hundreds of oil wells that dot the shores of lake Albert poses new threats to the pristine environment and has come at the expense of indigenous people’s rights. The Bagungu have been uprooted from ancestral grounds and their once revered cultural sites destroyed—including shrines and grazing lands.

Alex Wakitinti a chief custodian removes his shoes at Wandeko sacred natural site in Kasenyi village Buliisa district
Alex Wakitinti the chief custodian removes his shoes at Wandeko sacred natural site in Kasenyi village Buliisa district. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

“We have lost our grazing lands. Our people wish oil had not been discovered in this area,” Alex Wakitinti the chief custodian of sacred sites of the Bagungu, says, pointing at a newly built highway. “We no longer have access to medicinal herbs and sacred trees where we worshiped.”

French oil giant TotalEnergies operates the Tilenga oil project in the remote districts of Buliisa, Hoima, Kikuube, and Nwoya near the ecologically fragile Murchison Falls National Park and the Nile Delta in western Uganda. The project consists of six oil fields and is expected to have 400 wells drilled in 31 locations. It will also house an industrial area, support camps, a central processing facility, and feeder pipelines. The project necessitates the acquisition of 2,901 acres of land across the districts, as well as additional land within the national park.

TotalEnergies Tilenga project located near Lake Albert, Western Uganda
A map showing the TotalEnergies Tilenga project located near Lake Albert, Western Uganda. Credit: Petroleum Authority Uganda

According to Petroleum Authority Uganda, the process of acquiring land for the Tilenga project is still underway and has displaced 5,523 families. Residents and local officials, however, say that this process has been marred by inadequate and delayed compensation and resettlement.

Three years ago, TotalEnergies, approached Kaliisa Munange, a peasant farmer in kasenyi village, in Buliisa district, near the shores of lake Albert with a proposal. They would take over his 6-acre piece of land for project developments, in exchange for a bigger chunk of land, complete with a house, in a nearby village. With the promise of a better life, Mr. Munange consented to a relocation that he thought would be life-changing.

“When I arrived, I was so disappointed all the promises were empty, yet the company had already taken over my property,” he said, frowning his forehead with anger. “It was very far, there wasn’t a nearby school that my children would attend and the hospital is ten kilometers away. I decided to take them to court but up to now there is no decision.”

A notice board for Tilenga project-related information updates in Kasenyi Village, Buliisa district
A notice board for Tilenga project-related information updates in Kasenyi Village. Locals say these haven’t been effective due to the language barrier. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

Kaliisa’s is not the only case. His plight is shared by thousands of peasants in this lakeside village, which will soon house one of the largest oil processing facilities in Africa. Many have been waiting for compensation for several years since they were ordered not to plant any perennial crops and erect permanent structures on their land.

Fishing on Wanseko landing site on the shores of Lake Albert in Buliisa district
Fishermen at Wanseko landing site on the shores of Lake Albert in Buliisa district. Most fishing sites have been cordoned off due to oil developments. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

locals are nostalgic of the good old days when they had a source of livelihood tilling their land and fishing freely from L. Albert. When the land was communally used for grazing, worship, herbal medicines, and building materials.

“Community involvement and participation in the land acquisition process and environment impact assessment processes has been limited,” says Wakitinti “Our people were not involved in the identification of cultural sites and a number of medicinal herbs and trees were not assessed for compensation.”

Total executives deny the allegations insisting that the company is addressing the complaints of the affected people and has even been providing them with supplies, such as food.

A tamarind tree, one of the sacred trees central to Bagungu worship system, Kasenyi village,Buliisa district
The tamarind tree which is one of the sacred trees central to Bagungu worship system, Kasenyi Village, Buliisa district. Custodians say that a number of these trees were not assessed during the social and environmental impact assessments for Tilenga oil project. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

Pauline Macronald, head of the environment biodiversity at TotalEnergies Uganda says that the project is taking measures to ensure the socioeconomic stability of project-affected persons.

“TotalEnergies is committed to developing the Tilenga project while observing human rights standards and International Finance Corporation performance standards,” she said, adding that the company has been in close contact with project-affected people to minimize the projects’ impact on locals.

The constitution of Uganda safeguards property rights and land ownership. It affirms that everyone has a right to possess property and offers strict protection against unfair property deprivation. This states that everyone whose private property or land must be acquired for a public project should get prompt, fair, and reasonable compensation.

The International Finance Corporation Performance Standard 7 aims to guarantee that corporate operations minimize adverse effects and promote respect for indigenous peoples’ cultures, rights, and dignity. A fundamental criterion is the free, prior, and informed permission of indigenous peoples, as well as informed consultation and engagement with them throughout the project development process. The Bagungu, however, contend that these rights and standards have been violated by oil project developers.

“The land acquisition processes for oil projects have been shrouded in secrecy, no transparency. The processes have not been participatory and consultative in nature and any project resistance has resulted in costly formal court proceedings to the indigenes,” says Enoch Bigirwa, the former chairperson of the Bagungu Community Association.

The Bagungu Community Association BACA is a local group championing the rights of Bagungu amidst oil developments in their territory. It exists for the sociology-cultural and economic development of Bagungu. BACA is part of the environmental groups that filed a lawsuit against TotalEnergies in France over human rights violations and environmental harm in its Uganda oil project.

Who are the Bagungu

The Bagungu are an indigenous tribe native to Uganda and totaling around 83,986 according to the 2014 population census. They are mainly found in Buliisa, Hoima, and Masindi districts of western Uganda-Albertaine Graben. They belong to the historical Bunyoro Kingdom led by an Omukama, their King.

Bangungu people of Uganda
A map showing the location of the Bangungu people of Uganda. Credit: Bugungu Heritage and Information Centre

They are agricultural and fishing folk. Bagungu are the guardians and custodians of Lake Albert, a large freshwater lake that is the the source of Albert Nile, a branch of the River Nile that flows through Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, Burundi, Kenya, and DR Congo.

Oil Developments in Uganda

In 2006, oil and gas reserves were discovered in Uganda’s Albertine Graben.TotalEnergies and China’s CNOOC recently reached a final investment decision to inject $10 billion to kick start oil developments in partnership with the government of Uganda through Uganda National Oil Company which will subsequently lead to production in 2023. Output is expected to peak at 220,000 barrels a day of crude, Uganda consumes around 15,000 barrels a day of crude. Part of the crude oil will be refined to supply the local market while the remainder will be exported through a 1,443km buried East African Crude Oil Pipeline EACOP from Uganda to the Indian Ocean port of Tanga in Tanzania for export to the international market.

Uganda envisions the development of the oil and gas industry will accelerate economic growth, and job creation, improve the general prosperity of Ugandans and catapult the country into middle-income status. Petroleum Authority of Uganda estimates that about 200,000 people will be employed in the oil and gas sector.

However, climate campaigners have been opposing oil developments in the country citing environmental issues, climate change, and community rights violations. As a result, financiers of fossil fuel projects like banks, insurers, and other financial players have been urged to refrain from providing financial support for oil projects.

“Biodiversity is seriously threatened by Total’s oil operations. Government should encourage green economic investments in clean energy. These are inclusive and have the greatest multiplier effects on employment,” said Diana Nabiruma, the communications officer, at Africa Institute for Energy Governance.

This story was produced with the support of Internews’ Earth Journalism Network’s Indigenous Story Grants

Aiding Poverty By Smuggling A Rare Black Stone For 30 Pieces Of Silver

For Claudious Murungweni (not his real name), a 35-year-old bus conductor plying the Zimbabwe-South Africa cross-border route, the corruption and smuggling of a low base mineral has turned around his economic fortunes.

From a paltry equivalent of US$90 dollars as a monthly salary, Murungweni now has a new avenue that is financing his livelihood running into thousands of US dollars.

Since October 2021 when the government relaxed the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions that enabled cross-border buses to carry passengers, Murungweni says he has been approached by “good guys with great deals.”

“I carry raw granite stone slabs cut from the main blocks. These black granite slabs are movable by bus so for that job we get ZAR25 000 rand (US$1 600). First transaction is just a fifty percent deposit that I use to pay (bribe) the police and revenue collection officials at the Beitbridge border post.

“When we get to South Africa that is when I am paid the balance,” says Murungweni.

For the trip, Murungweni shares the money with the bus driver, and also bribes Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) officials at the Beitbridge border post and their South African counterparts.

Zimbabwe is a country richly endowed with useful diverse mineral resources. Despite this vast mineral resource base, more attention has been placed on highly valued minerals like gold and diamonds when people talk of smuggling.

The illicit financial flow in the mining sector according to the government through Home Affairs minister Kazembe Kazembe costs the state US$100 million each month in lost revenues, a total of US$1.2 billion annually.

The issue of illicit financial flows affecting Zimbabwe’s struggling economy has moved from highly precious minerals like gold to low minerals like the granite stone, now known as “the black gold.”

From where the granite stone is mined by the Chinese, in Mutoko, a rural area about 140 kilometers east of the capital Harare, villagers have little to show off the mineral mined in their area, except bearing the brunt of environmental damage.

Granite mining damages the environment
The mining of Granite in Mutoko has left a trail of environmental degradation. Mining companies have not come up with initiatives to protect the environment. Credit: Ubuntu Times

A 2019 investigation conducted by ZELA on the financial and social impact of black granite mining in Mutoko revealed that less than ten percent of Zimbabwe’s granite is cut and polished locally with the bulk of it being exported in its raw form as “granite merely cut into blocks.”

Because issues of smuggling are not treated with precision in courts, a close associate to the country’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Ms. Henrietta Rushwaya, was in October 2020 intercepted at the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International airport with six kilogrammes of gold worth an estimated US$366,000 in her handbag en-route to the United Arab Emirates.

She was arrested, spent days in prison and later released from custody in January 2021 on ZWL$100 000 bond. However,  her case is now collapsing after anti-corruption advocates hinted that the way her case is progressing has been engineered to collapse because of her close links to the Mnangagwa family.

“If I get arrested I will just know I am a small fish, and those heavily involved in smuggling are walking scot-free. That means our system has broken down and people can just do all they can to earn a living. I do not even ask where the granite stone is going,” adds Murungweni.

According to Shamiso Mtisi, the spokesperson of the Zimbabwe Environmental Lawyers Association (ZELA), from where the black granite is mined “environmental damage and lack of community benefits for the people of Mutoko” are key characteristics.

“We hear there are issues of the smuggling of the black granite stone from Zimbabwe specifically because of its fineness and being a great quality mineral. Unfortunately, there is a failure to have it benefit the communities from where it is mined.

“What is procedural is to have granite exported through formal procedures by going to the Minerals Marketing Cooperation of Zimbabwe (MMCZ), but the money that these mining companies pay as a mining levy is inadequate. Those levies deny the communities opportunities for development,” said Mtisi.

Export cumulative figures by the Zimbabwe Statistics Agency (Zimstat) revealed that in 2020 Mozambique, Zambia, South Africa, Italy, Switzerland, China, Greece and Spain are among the top export destinations of unbeneficiated granite.

The Black Gold, the new name for Granite stone
A heavy machine seen atop the huge Granite boulders mined in Mutoko. Credit: Ubuntu Times

Mutoko is not an exception regarding general environmental, economic and social challenges resulting from the mining of black granite.

To curb smuggling syndicates and plug illicit financial flows, the Zimra border controls say the upgrading of the Beitbridge Border post into a “world class” center is one that will help break the stranglehold of smuggling syndicates.

Zimra head of corporate communications Francis Chimanda says the authority is working to improve security to reduce instances of smuggling by improving the bus terminal that will see all travellers.

“The new bus terminal (at the border) will provide facilities where all buses will have their goods offloaded and checked before authority to proceed will be granted by revenue officers through scanning of gate passes to activate the opening of boom gates.

“This will go a long way in ensuring that the buses are checked and authority to proceed is granted. The upgrade will also generally improve security and reduce instances of smuggling at the Beitbridge border post as the new measure for traffic control and movement have improved the checks and balances,” Chimanda says.

Chimanda also pointed out that Zimra officials have embarked on random searches of buses to break the smuggling syndicates but they have not intercepted any with black granite stone.

“Currently random searches are being done on exit buses and to date, no interceptions have been made on granite being smuggled. Having said that any instances of possible smuggling will be thoroughly investigated” Chimanda adds.

Zimbabwe Miners Federation (ZMF) spokesperson Dosman Mangisi says as long as government and policymakers in Zimbabwe do not come up with a Minerals and Metals Beneficiation policy, the country’s minerals will continue to be smuggled out.

He says the value of beneficiation should be explained to the communities where the minerals are being mined in order to empower locals.

“Basically we are lagging behind as a country because Zimbabwe has no legal and policy instruments that enable value addition of our minerals. We have no metal beneficiation laws.

“Our principals should come with beneficiation policy frameworks that govern this. The ones we have speak of mining on a touch-here-touch-there basis,” Mangisi says.

For example, sample surveys conducted by the ZMF since 2016 have concluded that Zimbabwe is sitting on US$30 billion worth of iron ore but the country is currently importing 70 percent of its iron requirements.

“For this country to unlock value, granite beneficiation should be done at community level through a formulated Minerals and Metals Beneficiation policy. These minerals should therefore be classified so that we know their uses and value.

“As long as we do not have beneficiation policies we will never know the value of what we have,” adds Mangisi.

He also urged the government to start beneficiation awareness campaigns at community level so that locals know what value their minerals have.

Uganda Oil Companies Shrug Off Environmental Concerns To Advance $10 Billion Oil Project

KAMPALA, Uganda — The Ugandan government, backed by French and Chinese investors recently announced a final investment decision to kick start the long-delayed development of Uganda’s vast crude oil reserves, opening the way for the East African nation to become an oil exporter. But the planned development of the $10 billion projects, along the shores of Lake Albert, poses new threats in the ecologically sensitive area.

French oil giant TotalEnergies and China National Offshore Oil Corporation say they will start pumping as much as 230,000 barrels-a-day of crude from the region by 2025, which will be shipped for export through a $3.5 billion heated pipeline linking the oil fields along Uganda’s western border with the Democratic Republic of Congo to the Indian Ocean port of Tanga in Tanzania. The 900-mile pipeline will pass through Uganda’s lush green hilly farmlands, vast areas of marshlands, before snaking around Lake Victoria, Africa’s largest freshwater lake.

Fanfare and military parades marked the event to sign the agreements, a firm commitment that the country’s 6.5 billion barrels of crude, discovered more than a decade ago will be commercialized. President Yoweri Museveni and the Vice President of Tanzania Phillip Mpago were among the key figures that witnessed the event.

“It is a masterpiece of a project and will be achieved at low cost and with a low carbon footprint,” said TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanné, adding that the Ugandan project comes at a time when the world is facing increased demand for fossil fuel.

Patrick Pouyanné the CEO of TotalEnergies makes remarks at the event to mark the signing of the final investment decision that will kick start the development of Uganda’s vast crude oil reserves
Patrick Pouyanné, the CEO of TotalEnergies makes remarks at the event to mark the signing of the final investment decision where he said that Total was committed to developing the crude reserves in a sustainable manner. Credit: Petroleum Authority of Uganda

But local and international campaigners remain concerned about the environmental impact of the new fossil fuel projects and their carbon footprint. In particular, activists are concerned about the pipeline’s potential impact on water resources for millions of people in Tanzania and Uganda, vulnerable ecosystems, and the climate crisis.

Days after the signing, an oil production ship exploded off the Nigerian coast of Escravos, Delta State in what is considered to be the nation’s second major environmental disaster in three months. It’s yet another oil disaster that has resulted in huge amounts of toxic oil being released into the ocean, a stark reminder of the reality of risks involved in fossil fuels production.

Major funders for the pipeline project have also continued to pull out. Four out of five of South Africa’s largest lenders recently confirmed that they will not be involved in the financing of the pipeline project.

According to data from the World Bank, Uganda accounts for only 0.01% of the total global carbon emissions while its per capita CO2 emissions are also low at 0.13 tonnes. But, that is expected to change when oil production starts. Experts say, oil transported by the pipeline will emit at least 33 million tonnes of CO2 every year.

But Ugandan officials sought to allay the fears, pleading to safeguard the environment and social protection in the development of the projects.

“This project comes with a very big responsibility on the work of all stakeholders involved in the management and development of the country’s oil and gas sector,” said Jane N.Mulemwa, Board Chairperson of the state energy regulator Petroleum Authority of Uganda.

Patrick Pouyanné, the CEO of TotalEnergies leads the other joint venture partners -CNOOCUgandaLtd, TPDCTZ, and UNOC in announcing the final investment decision
Uganda’s Minister of Energy and Mineral Development Ruth Nankabirwa Ssentamu claps after the announcement of the final investment decision that will unlock the development of Uganda’s vast crude oil reserves. Credit: Petroleum Authority of Uganda

Local civil society actors have also expressed concern about the gross rights violations meted on local oil projects host communities that oil companies and government have failed to address. Locals complain of being intimidated and threatened by local authorities to accept the inadequate compensation for their land. In 2019 a group of NGOs filed a lawsuit against Total in France over human rights violations and environmental harm in relation to planned oil exploitation in the heart of a protected natural area in Uganda. The organizations accuse Total of failure to adhere to its duty of vigilance “Total’s social responsibility.” The case is still in court.

“Oil Companies should walk the talk and comply with social and environmental safeguards, and international best practices on the path to first oil in 2025,” said James Muhindo, the coordinator of the civil society coalition on oil and gas.

The preliminary work to set the stage for the construction of these projects has progressed. The environment and social impact assessments, as well as the front-end engineering design studies for the Kingfisher, Tilenga projects, and the pipeline, were successfully concluded. All the land required for these projects has been identified and surveyed.  The processes of compensation and relocation of the project-affected persons are ongoing. These had stalled for years, amid a litany of disagreements such as tax disputes, funding challenges, and opposition from climate activists.

“This milestone puts us on the path to first oil in 2025,” Uganda’s Minister of Energy and Mineral Development Ruth Nankabirwa Ssentamu said in a speech adding that close to 160,000 jobs are expected to be created during the project’s development.

Aquaponics Farming Helps Ugandan Women Regain Lost Livelihoods From The Pandemic

KAMPALA, Uganda — On a hill above Kampala’s city suburb of Ntinda, new farmer Peace Mukulungu looks over her aquaponics farming project she says is slowly allowing her to recover from pandemic-related disruption. It is a manifestation of how new charity-backed interventions are allowing COVID-19 victims to restore livelihoods.

“Who knew I would become a fish farmer after all these years as a secretary!” she exclaims with a wide grin on her face.

The Aquaponics farming project is an initiative of Water Governance Institute WGI a local non-government organization that is supported by funding from USAID. It was rolled out in Kampala in 2018. Working with Kampala City Council, WGI has been promoting Aquaponics farming as a recovery initiative targeting women in Kampala that lost their livelihoods as a result of the Coronavirus pandemic. The intervention is aimed at promoting food security, improved livelihoods as well as boosting household incomes.

The 50-year-old Mukulungu is a single mother who over the years relied on her job in a secretarial bureau in the city to support her five children. When the pandemic hit and Uganda started to lock down to slow the spread of the highly contagious virus, the business closed. Within weeks, she was home and jobless.

Today Mukulungu is a beneficiary of the aquaponics farming project, from which she has been able to replace lost income from the secretarial bureau. Her system was stocked with 115 catfish fingerlings and vegetables including spinach and lettuce. These initial inputs were offered by WGI including fish feeds for 6 months.

Mukulungu earns Uganda shillings 350,000 (USD 100) per month from her fish farming, nearly double what she used to earn at the secretarial bureau.

“Who knew I could become a fish farmer without owning land and a pond,” she keeps wondering. “This is more convenient because I don’t even have to pay transport fare.”

Deborah Gita harvests Kale leaves from her Aquaponics system that consists of a fish tank and a grow bed. She is already reaping benefits from her system
Deborah Gita an aquaponics project beneficiary harvests Kale leaves from her aquaponics system that consists of a fish tank and a grow bed. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

Similar stories of lost livelihoods across Uganda are commonplace. From teachers to market workers many women who had over the years supported their families have been left struggling as Uganda implemented one of the strictest lockdowns to stem COVID-19.

According to the World Bank, the COVID-19 shock caused a sharp contraction of the economy to its slowest pace in three decades. Household incomes fell when firms closed and jobs were lost, particularly in the urban informal and formal sectors. Gross domestic product contracted by 1.1 percent in the year 2020.

The impacts have been worse especially for women working in both the formal and informal sectors. A recent report by Akina Mama wa Afrika – a local charity – indicates that the economic impact has resulted in reduced incomes and opportunities to earn a livelihood for over 70% of women employed in the informal sector which is less secure in terms of social protection. The report further states that in the absence of mitigation in the form of gender-informed strategies, women are likely to face heightened tensions, financial uncertainties, food insecurity, and vulnerability to poverty.

Aisha Nalwoga the fisheries officer at WGI describes Aquaponics as a smart agricultural innovation that combines both fish rearing and growing horticultural crops in a closed-loop water-recycling system. The system comprises a water tank in which fish is reared and grow-beds. The grow-beds contain a sand-gravel-aggregate layered medium where crops are grown. Water is introduced, manually or automatically into the fish tank from where it is drawn out as fish-waste-water and irrigated onto crops in grow-beds.

“The system has a capacity of 1200 catfish and 160 horticultural plants in the grow-beds. The horticultural crops may include tomatoes, spinach, lettuce, green pepper among others,” says Nalwoga. It allows for the year-round production of protein and vegetables. WGI working with Makerere University Agricultural Research Institute, Kabanyolo came up with this innovation.

The system is movable and can be set up anywhere requiring a small piece of land. It may be automated with water pumps using grid or solar energy, depending on farmers’ preferences, affordability, and access to the energy options.

Deborah Gita poses next to her aquaponics farming system where she just harvested kale and beans. Aquaponics farming project beneficiaries are already reaping from their systems
Deborah Gita poses next to her aquaponics farming system where she has just harvested kale and beans. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

As COVID-19 ravaged the informal sector, the clientele for the project grew from less than 50 people to over 100 across Kampala’s five divisions. The project has established 8 demonstration sites in Kampala city, plus Kamuli, Hoima, and Adjumani districts, supporting more than 400 beneficiaries across the country, a critical intervention as the country struggles to recover from the pandemic.

“People are embracing the innovation and adopting it especially because these systems take up less space and can be located anywhere in the backyards or rooftops and the fish is protected from vermin unlike in ponds,” says Nalwoga.

The rapid urbanization, limited space, and a growing population in Kampala make aquaponics farming a better alternative to fish farming in earthen ponds that require bigger land and space.

For women most of who culturally in Uganda don’t own land under customary law and tenure land ownership, and are dogged by insecure land rights, Aquaponics farming is a ray of hope.

Other beneficiaries are like 55-year-old Deborah Gita, who used to run a garment shop, dealing in used beddings in the sprawling downtown market of St. Balikudembe. When the pandemic hit, the market, one of the country’s most congested was among the first to be closed down. Out of the job, the single mother faced a daunting challenge to support her five children. She was approached by KCCA and the village councilor to become an aquaponics adoptee. After days of training, she was assisted to set up a system at her home.

“My system was stocked with 400 catfish fingerlings and vegetables including kale and beans,” says Gita. “I am now able to feed my family with a balanced diet and at the same time earn some money from the produce.”

Now earning some 1,500 shillings ($4) per kilogram of Kale vegetable, Gita, who once struggled to feed her children earns enough money to afford necessities including food, pay for electricity, and her water bills. She is looking forward to the harvest of fish.

From her garment stall, she used to earn a profit of around Uganda shillings 500,000. Since she started on aquaponics, she has managed to get at least 400,000 each month from the sale of vegetables alone. When her fish gets of age, she hopes to more than double this.

An automated Aquaponics farming system consisting of a fish tank and grow beds where vegetables are grown.
Peace Mukulungu’s automated Aquaponics farming system consisting of 114 catfish and grow beds with spinach vegetables. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

However, it has not been entirely smooth sailing for the project. Low skills to manage aquaponics systems, limited access to inputs such as water, fish feeds, and expensive electricity are some of the challenges before people like Gita. Securing a dependable and affordable source of good quality fish feeds and fish fingerlings on the Ugandan market has also not been easy for most beneficiaries. This has led to system management lapses leading to fish deaths and crop failure in some cases. Nonetheless, project officers have come up with training manuals as well as system management manuals translated into local languages.

Beneficiaries are also required to keep books on how they manage the systems in terms of how much water is used daily. Weekly calls are also made to beneficiaries to check on their progress. Through community awareness-raising meetings and radio talk shows, WGI has been promoting aquaponics farming among farmers, households, and youth in targeted districts. “We see aquaponics being an opportunity for employment for the many unemployed youths in the country,” says Nalwoga.

For its part, the government of Uganda has put in place measures to mitigate the economic impact of COVID-19 on the masses. Experts say that the majority of these interventions target the formal sector and leave out the informal sector where many workers live hand to mouth, mostly women.

It has also been noted that these strategies and interventions are not alive to the gendered impacts of the pandemic and fail to fulfill aspirations of sustainable development goal 5 on gender equality and empowerment of women and girls yet this is crucial to accelerating recovery from the pandemic.

“Aquaponics is a viable and smart agricultural innovation however beneficiaries need to be thoroughly trained so that they understand how a system works, as the only way they will sustainably reap benefits from the systems,” says Victoria Tibenda Namulawa head of Aquaculture at Uganda’s National Agricultural Research Organisation.

This reporting was supported by the International Women’s Media Foundation’s Gender Justice Reporting Initiative.

Karamoja Mining Rush Threatens Livelihoods of Indigenous People

Billions of investments into mining projects have breathed new life in Uganda’s once-neglected Karamoja region, creating thousands of jobs in mineral-rich heartlands near the Kenyan border but the investment rush has also brought new problems, fueling environmental degradation, rights violations, and land grabbing, threatening livelihoods of millions of indigenous Karamojong people.

Ugandan authorities are investigating the latest deadly clash in the impoverished gold mining sub-county of Rupa Moroto district which happened in late April, that left a 28-year old local defense personnel dead and forced several hundred locals to flee their homes after armed assailants staged a daytime raid and stole gold ores, worth millions of Ugandan shillings. Days earlier, dozens of policemen from Uganda’s mineral protection police who had been deployed to secure the lucrative gold mining village abandoned their positions, due to rising attacks, blamed on assailants, who usually cross from Kenya’s Turkana region.

In a region long inhabited traditionally by cattle-herders, the rush to get the region’s precious minerals gold, limestone, and marble, is uprooting people, damaging key water sources, and stirring social unrest. Locals talk of being displaced from their ancestral farmlands by land grabbers while others are now suffering from many diseases, including skin infections and diarrhea, blamed on consuming water from contaminated water bodies, as some miners use hazardous chemicals including mercury to extract gold.

Impact On The Environment

“We have been invaded by foreigners who don’t care about our livelihoods,” said Anne Napeyo, a 30-year old mother in Rupa. “Many of our people are getting wounds on their skin because the water here is contaminated”

Thousands in Karamoja have taken jobs in the mines while others have become “artisanal diggers” digging their own holes and tunnels, risking cave-ins and other dangers in pursuit of buried treasure, local leaders say. In addition to hazards such as contaminated water bodies, mining activities are leaving behind gaping pits, which now dot vast areas as artisan miners leave these behind in search of new grounds. Small children sometimes drown in these pits, while local farmers have lost livestock.

Sacred grounds known as ‘Akiriket’ are also being destroyed. According to the Karamoja traditional setting, every community is socially organized to have its own Akiriket from where the assemble for social events from initiations to naming happens. Community leaders say the minerals are turning into a curse.

“We want development but it can’t be at the expense of our peoples’ lives and livelihoods,” said Margerate Lomonyang coordinator of Karamoja Women Cultural Group and Karamoja representative on the multi-stakeholder group for the Extractives Industries Transparency initiative EITI. “Investors are taking advantage of desperate people who are trying to make a living in the mines”

Land Grabbing

A total of 17,083 square kilometers of land area in Karamoja is licensed for mineral exploration and extraction activities, according to official data. In 2018, Chinese mining company Sunbelt was given 3.3 square kilometers of land to set up a $13 million marble mining factory in Rupa sub-county. A year later, the company expanded its operations to cover additional 4.1 square kilometers, ostensibly after a deal with local leaders. Hundreds of families have since been pushed out of their ancestral homes, local officials say. Locals accuse Rupa Community development trust, a community trustee group created three years ago, of conniving with investors to steal their land.

“The community leaders came to us with compensation documents saying they were going to help us demand compensation when investors come,” one local known as Lokol, said “They tricked us to sign them without paying anything, now we have nowhere to go.”

While Sunbelt insists that company representatives went through the right channels to acquire the land, including signing a memorandum of understanding with the local leaders, authorities are investigating the transaction, according to the energy and minerals ministry.

“Sunbelt violated the community members’ rights to fair and adequate compensation in the land acquisition process. They didn’t involve the community members who are the real custodians of the land,” said Lomonyang.

Another company DAO Marble Africa Limited, which operates a mining license to mine marble has been accused by Human Rights Watch for rights violations, including allegations that the company connived and paid off a few local chiefs without compensating the local residents.

Land ownership in Karamoja is under customary tenure and communally owned and managed. This means that land is held in trust by one generation for another with the elders as ‘stewards’. This very unclear land ownership model makes fair compensation a difficult issue as few elders negotiate with the companies for the temporary acquisition of land.

Local Miners Association To The Rescue

Karamoja Miners Association unites miners in the region and was formed to sensitize local mining communities about their rights, help locals demand accountability from their leaders, and seek fair compensation from mining companies.

A Woman makes a submission during a meeting organized by Resource Rights Africa and karamoja Miners Association to educate miners about their labor rights
Women engage in mining activities in Karamoja. Poor working conditions and environmental degradation pose health risks for them. Credit: Resource Rights Africa

“We organize miners in groups so that they have a formidable voice and can negotiate for better wages and working conditions from mining companies,” says Simon Nagiro the chairperson of the association. “We have also embarked on interpreting into local languages miners’ rights as enshrined under the mining laws.”

Regions’ Mineral Potential

Karamoja is endowed with a vast array of metallic and industrial minerals that have the potential to be developed commercially. A 2011 survey found that the region contains over 50 minerals including gold, limestone, uranium, marble, graphite, gypsum, iron, wolfram, nickel, copper, cobalt, lithium, and tin. With 61% of Karamoja’s 1.2 million people living in poverty, the region’s mineral potential holds the promise of economic development.

Karamoja Mining At A Glance

The Constitution of Uganda 1995, vests all mineral resources in the hands of government but article 244 provides that minerals shall be exploited taking into account the interests of landowners and local governments and further states that land will not be deprived of a person without prompt payment of fair and adequate compensation. Under articles 39 and 41, every Ugandan has a right to a clean and healthy environment and as such can bring an action for any pollution or improper disposal of wastes.

The Mining Act, 2003 is the principal law that governs mining in Uganda. Under Section 4 of the act, a person may acquire the right to search for and mine any mineral by acquiring a license issued by the commissioner. Section 15 provides for payment of compensation to owners of private land for damage done to the surface of the land or to any crops, trees, buildings, or for livestock injured or killed by the negligence of the holder of the license or an agent. Section 43 provides that a mining license shall not be granted unless the proposed mining program takes into proper account environmental impact assessment and safety factors.

Section 110 further makes it mandatory for every license holder to submit a costed environmental restoration plan which requires approval by the National Environment Management Authority. The Act however does not clearly address the regulation of mining activities by different government agencies and how they can follow up with the investors regarding royalties. This is worsened by the limited role local government plays in the regulation of mining activities due to resource constraints.

Rights Of Indigenous Groups In Uganda

According to Minority rights group international, Karamojong pastoralists, are some of the most marginalized minorities in Uganda, isolated economically and politically. Commonly stereotyped by their compatriots as violent and backward, other Ugandans refer to them as warriors. The African Commission’s International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs also recognizes the Karamojong people as indigenous minority groups in Uganda. However, Uganda does not officially recognize Indigenous minority groups. This lack of formal recognition by the state further disenfranchises Karamojong.

Uganda is a signatory to various international instruments that reiterate the rights of indigenous people. These include; the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People 2007, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. However, the country is still lagging behind in terms of protecting the rights of indigenous people.

An artisan gold miner mines for gold in Rupa sub-county
A Karamojong woman digs a hole as she mines for gold in Rupa-sub-county. Such holes dot the area and have become death traps for both children and livestock. Credit: Diana Taremwa Karakire

“We are empowering communities by educating them about their land and property rights so that they are able to hold mining companies accountable,” says Abaho Herbert a program officer at Resource Rights Africa a local charity organization operating in the region. “We also work with local leaders to put in place by-laws that enable fair wages for miners to avoid being exploited by the mining companies”

Since Belgium-based Africa gold refinery set up a $20 million gold plant in Uganda, the country has become a magnet for gold mining activities, notably in Karamoja. Gold exports fetch $1 billion every year and have overtaken coffee as Uganda’s leading export commodity.

For many local leaders, this rush is the reason for increased insecurity, displacement of locals, and inter-communal clashes. Gold miners are routinely attacked by assailants looking for the highly sought-after metal, bringing back memories of the insecurity that plagued the region at the height of cattle rustling in the 1990s and 2000s. Illegal miners continue to flock to the 7 districts of Karamoja, driving up displacements, clashes over land ownership and shared water bodies.

Food insecurity is also a challenge in the region and reliance on natural resources has rendered livelihoods sensitive to climate change, already a reality manifested inform of recurring droughts, flash floods, and prolonged dry spells.

In June 2021, Uganda’s cabinet approved a draft mining law (Mining and minerals Bill 2019) that imposes steep penalties for violations in the sector, including fines of 1 billion shillings ($278,164.12) and prison terms of up to seven years for those found guilty of environmental degradation, illegal mining among other violations.

The new law will replace the old mining legislation that has been in place since 2003, when the region hadn’t discovered vast minerals, according to Vicent Kedi the commissioner licensing at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development.

“The new law will solve issues of non-compliance by mining companies to social and environmental safeguards, ” he says. “We are working with local leaders in the region to continuously monitor mining company operations.

This story was produced with the support of Internews’ Earth Journalism Network’s Indigenous Story Grants

President Kenyatta Launches Port Of Lamu Amid Uproar From Environmentalists In Coastal Kenya

Kenya’s President, Uhuru Kenyatta on the 3rd week of May inaugurated the Lamu Port that seeks to link the Indian Ocean to the ambitious regional project, the Lamu Port South Sudan Ethiopia Transport Corridor, otherwise known as the LAPSSET Corridor Project.

President Kenyatta presided over the operationalization of the first of the 32 berths port, terming it a critical pillar of the LAPSSET project, which is a transport corridor linking the three east African countries.

“As a critical pillar of the Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia Transport (LAPSSET) corridor project, this Port will connect South Sudan, Ethiopia, and Kenya. Eventually, it will connect northern Kenya to the Middle Belt of Africa; which runs from Dakar, Senegal in the west to Lamu in the east,” President Kenyatta said.

But, the event raised more concern by lobby groups in Lamu, as well as scientists on the president’s commitment to environmental protection, as they claim that these projects are destroying the environment and costing the local residents their sources of livelihood.

The LAPSSET project is the second to be set up in Lamu, after the coal-fired power plant that the government wanted to set up in Kwasasi, a few miles from the new Lamu Port. The coal plant project was halted by the Environment Court in June 2019, on the basis that the stakeholders did not carry out an environmental impact assessment. A consortium of like-minded organizations fighting for environmental justice under the umbrella name, Save Lamu, had filed the case at the court.

President opens Port of Lamu
Swaleh Elbusaidy, a community environmental lawyer shows where the coal-fired power plant was to be set up in Kwasasi, Lamu. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

The project also involves the construction of three major cities within the country, an oil pipeline, a standard gauge railway, and major airports.

Likewise, the same organization had filed a case at the High Court of Kenya in January 2012, and a determination was made in 2018 by the same court.

In the April 2018 ruling, the High Court found rampant environmental violations in the project and awarded Sh1.76 billion to Lamu fishermen affected by the project. The ruling remains frozen without implementation, while an appeal by the Kenya Ports Authority and other responders has not been heard by the Court of Appeal since 2018.

Despite this ruling, Lamu Port construction continued for four years unabated. Thousands of fishermen have had their livelihoods affected by four years of dredging and land reclamation. Port construction has profoundly damaged the ecosystem, in particular killing corals and diminishing marine nurseries in a richly biodiverse area.

“Already three years have passed since the court awarded us this compensation, which has been owed to us since 2014 when the port project began,” said Somo M. Somo, Chairman of the Lamu County Beach Management Unit.

“Lamu fishermen leadership attended several stakeholder meetings over these years. We made concessions to find an agreeable resolution. Just two weeks ago, we sat in meetings for a week, while observing Ramadan, to reach an agreed-upon plan, yet they have decided to launch the Lamu Port despite the promise they made last week about the fishermen’s compensation matter,” said Mohamed Athman, Save Lamu Chairman.

President opens Port of Lamu
A mangrove forest at the Lamu Archipelago has been largely destroyed at the port construction site. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

“In moving forward with this launch, the government and the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) have failed to keep their word. Rather than resolve this vital fishermen’s compensation matter as promised, instead, they have decided to celebrate and launch Lamu Port,” Athman said.

Many would argue that the development project would be a great opportunity for growth and development for the region, but as Human Rights Watch spoke to a human rights defender working in Lamu, she pointed out that this should not be the case at the expense of people’s livelihood.

“When LAPSSET began, it was touted as a boon for the people of Lamu, a source of hope for many who had lived in poverty for generations. The project was to employ many, open up the region for trade and growth. However, in its early years, the project has left many without land or compensation. Fishermen are losing out on their livelihood since the fishing area is now restricted, and their little boats cannot be used further out into the ocean for deep-sea fishing,” said Salome Nduta, a senior program officer at Kenya’s National Coalition of Human Rights Defenders.

Direct compensation for harm incurred is just one remedy amongst a litany of environmental violations in the planning and construction of Lamu Port, a major component of the Lamu Port and Lamu-Southern Sudan-Ethiopia Transport (LAPSSET) Corridor Project.

President opens Port of Lamu
Ali Abdallah Haji, a farmer in Lamu at his farm near the new Port of Lamu. His farm will be largely affected by the construction of oil companies and a city within the area. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

The port has been constructed by the China Communications Construction Company (CCCC), associated with the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC), for USD $500 million, according to Save Lamu.

However, the organization also blames the regulatory agency, National Environmental Management Authority (NEMA), saying that it has failed in its role to monitor compliance and enforce the violations occasioned by the project proponents.

In a statement, Save Lamu raised concerns and put out their demands to the presidency and all the stakeholders involved.

“We condemn this decision by President Kenyatta and officials to launch Lamu Port while ignoring the project’s serious issues that were affirmed by the High Court in 2018; we call on the Kenya Ports Authority and Treasury to swiftly compensate the fishermen, and to stop shirking their responsibilities and making false promises; we call on the Court of Appeal to hear and resolve the appeal that was filed by Kenya Ports Authority and fellow respondents in 2018 — and stop ignoring a pivotal court ruling; and finally, we call on President Kenyatta to take immediate action to ensure the Lamu fishermen are compensated and resolve the serious and escalating environmental issues with Lamu Port,” the statement concluded.

The Ghanaian Christians Working For The Salvation Of A Dying Earth

Before jumping into her first sermon for 2021, Rev. Agnes Philips took time to stress something to her largely middle-class congregation in the Legon Interdenominational Church. Concern for the environment.

“We are stewards, not owners; caretakers, not proprietors,” a pamphlet she brandishes reads.

Watching from home because of the Coronavirus pandemic, 70-year-old Dr. Robert Otsyina derives some satisfaction from fellowshipping in a church willing to engage with environmental conservation.

Caring for the environment has been dear to him for three decades as he worked for the International Centre for Research in Agroforestry (ICRAF) as a researcher in Tanzania.

Just as dear to him, especially in the last 15 years which he returned to Ghana, has been his Christian faith.

It hadn’t been until 2015 when he formally joined the Legon Interdenominational Church and connected with its albeit relatively-small environmental action.

And Dr. Otsyina is not averse to starting small, as he lauds the consistency of his church’s moves to combat plastic waste with a recycling program.

Whilst grateful for such opportunities to participate and think about ways to preserve the environment within the context of his fellowship, Dr. Otsyina knows the Church in Ghana as a whole needs to reorient its followers for change on a national scale.

But there is a lack of awareness for the earliest mandate from God to Christians that concerns him.

“I think Christians don’t really understand this. They don’t see protecting the environment as a significant responsibility,” he remarks. “God didn’t just put Adam and Eve in the Garden but he gave them the task to take care of the land.”

On the other end of the generational spectrum, 24-year-old Daniel Anyorgyia, a journalist and environmental activist, faces similar concerns with the Church in Ghana.

Reducing carbon emissions and developing solutions to climate change and renewable energy are things he has been thinking about over the past four years.

The same can’t be said of his church.

“You hardly hear anything on environmental conservation,” he laments of Deeper Life, the church he fellowships with.

Protecting the environment really should be a basic way of fulfilling key Christian edicts, he stresses.

“If churches are not looking at how to conserve the environment as a way of caring for another, that means there is either a knowledge gap or no one seems to care.”

Ghanaian activist
Daniel Anyorigya has spent most of his adult life working to protect the environment. Credit: Daniel Anyorigya

The church in Ghana wields tremendous influence with over 70 percent of Ghana’s population professing to be Christian.

This influence grows when narrowing in on some mega-churches which command allegiances of hundreds of thousands nationwide but are criticized for settling for the prosperity gospel instead of using their reach to consistently force social change.

Ghana’s environmental situation has worsened in the last five years.

The prevalence of illegal mining has threatened food and water security and resulted in the loss of forest cover to devastating effect.

Using remote sensing and satellite data from the University of Maryland, Global Forest Watch estimated that there was a 60 percent increase in Ghana’s primary rainforest loss in 2018 compared to 2017. That was the highest in the world.

The loss of forest isn’t exclusive to illegal factors though.

Currently, activists are on edge because of the Ghana government’s decision to mine bauxite in the Atewa Forest Reserve which is one of the world’s Key Biodiversity Areas that harbours extraordinary wildlife and provides water for millions of Ghanaians.

These are some of the issues Dr. Otsyina would like drummed home within Christian circles but he laments that “the awareness is just not there.”

He thinks the Church may be Ghana’s last hope for saving the environment as he notes the little faith he and most Ghanaians have in the government.

“More focus and actions should be directed towards sustainable environmental conservation. The Church should work closely with the government to save the environment.”

For as much as is demanded of the Church, there are a number of environmental activist groups that base their work on biblical principles.

Foremost among them is A Rocha Ghana, which has been on the vanguard of protests to preserve the Atewa Forest Reserve.

Emmanuel Turkson, the Creation Care officer at A Rocha Ghana, says a crucial part of their work has been trying to change the mindset of churches.

“We use scripture references as an approach to integrate environmental action into their whole mission,” says Turkson.

And there has been some progress on a surface level as churches put environmental plans on paper.

But this seldom translates to actionable outcomes, Turkson notes.

“In terms of prioritization and commitment, you can tell that we are not really interested in prioritizing these actions.”

This notwithstanding, over the last decade, churches have been “opening doors to these conversations” and Turkson views this as a win.

He cites the Pentecost Church of Ghana, the Evangelical Presbyterian, and the Christian Council of Ghana for commendation in this regard.

Pentecost Church, which has a reach of over 4 million Ghanaians, has even gone on to develop a creation care course in its theological school. 

And he further expects things to get better.

“There is no institution in Ghana which is able to change behavior and perception like the church.”

Beyond affecting the direction of churches, A Rocha Ghana is on hand to offer support to smaller environmental groups, especially those with religious inclinations.

Turkson was on hand when a group made up of young Catholics, Christians Advocating Respect For the Environment, took time to engage students in the Accra Traning College in a tree planting exercise.

Seth Akagla, the Chairperson of the group, thinks of only nourishing the earth when the call to stewardship comes to mind.

“Having dominion over the world doesn’t mean that creations should be objects that we have to exploit but subjects that we need to protect.”

Tree planting
Seth Aklaga (R) takes baby steps towards a greener Ghana with a tree-planting project. Credit: Delali Adogla-Bessa / Ubuntu Times

Seth is proud of the work organizations like his and A Rocha Ghana do to keep Ghana green.

He perhaps wishes they made more noise about it.

“The only challenge is that they [faith-based environmental groups] don’t trumpet the things that they do with regards to environmental protection.”

Whatever publicity he is able to drum up for his group’s advocacy, it still won’t trump the potential gains the organized Christianity could make.

His charge to them is simple.

“I believe that in the next five years, we should have environmental protection groups in all churches in Ghana.”

As Christians look forward to the second coming of Jesus Christ, there is a tension between escatology and the need to breathe life into a dying earth.

That the church is known to filter issues on climate change, which is causing devastating changes in weather patterns, through teachings on the end-times irks Daniel.

“Outbreak of diseases, the pandemic, famine, droughts; these are things that the church will label as the second coming of Jesus Christ,” he says.

Moving forward activist hope the keyword for Christians is balance; balancing the concern for eternity and their temporary existence on earth.

“We need to find a middle ground where we have religious leaders communicate effectively on environmental conservation with their congregants by highlighting issues like climate change,” Daniel says.

Kenyan Street Families Take Up Street Cleanup In Nairobi

Nairobi, January 22 — For more than half a century, John Mwangi has lived in the streets, the only place he’s known as being his home. He has seen it all here in his 56 years of life, including getting arrested and imprisoned, as well as losing his wife and sons who walked out of his life.

The father of two grew up an orphan after his parents died when he was only one year old and after being brought up by their neighbor, he finally gave up and resorted to street life. His only sibling, a brother, later died and he was then left without a family.

He never then got the opportunity to know his parents as they died while he was still too young.

“You know, here in the streets, sometimes you get napped by the police on the wrong side, not that you did anything wrong. And they take advantage to imprison you. That happened to me and after I came out, I found that my wife had left and gone to her rural home. I was in my 20’s then,” Mwangi says as he pulls a rake full of trash.

Today, he joins a group of other street families in cleaning up Nairobi city streets, something that is contrary to popular belief that street families are mostly responsible for the filth in the streets. And as he puts it, he understands the importance of a clean environment.

“Out here in the streets, we have witnessed our friends dying of diseases that were brought about by the dirt around where we stay. That’s why we feel the importance of at least cleaning it so that we can stop more deaths,” Mwangi says.

The cleanup had been organized by Plogging Kenya, an organization that is working to encourage people to pick up litter on their paths especially while on outdoor events such as jogging, walking, cycling, and hiking; that in most cases they organize for them.

The organization brought together climate activists and, companies, and other environmental enthusiasts to clean up along the Nairobi River, which is filled with filth and whose banks are home to many street children in the city.

The area is called Grogon, and according to Mwangi, it used to be too dirty but such initiatives to clean it have ensured that it continues to be tidy over time.

A street child sniffing glue as he watches the river flow
A street child sniffs glue as he watches the water flow on the Nairobi River during the street cleanup. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

The organizer, Zablon Ogolla who is also the founder of Plogging Kenya also took part in the cleanup and says that the event was necessary in order to enable the street families to take responsibility for their own environment and ensure that their health is also good.

“You have to understand that a number of them are not environmentally conscious, and are not so concerned about a clean environment. And so if we bring an idea and partner with them, we will have achieved an objective as they will know that is important to have a clean environment and to segregate the same waste that we pick so that we can know the composition of the waste that we have picked. And as you can see, 99% of what we have picked is plastic. So, plastic is really choking our nation and it’s time we did something about it,” Ogolla says.

Also taking part during the street cleanup were the Kenya Association of Manufacturers, an umbrella organization whose members are largely responsible for the manufacture and distribution of single-use plastics that are, in turn, spoiling the environment. Its members have, from time to time, found themselves on the wrong side as environmentalists have accused them of being the ones making and distributing plastics through food, drinks, and other product packaging, without minding where the plastic waste ends up.

Sharon Okwany, the PET Sub-sector Liaison Officer at the Kenya Association of Manufacturers says that their members have resorted to creating awareness among the public on how to manage and dispose of the plastics after they sell them to the public.

“Yes, the plastics are produced and sold to the public through packaging, but the public is not aware of how they are supposed to properly manage and dispose of this waste at the end of the day. So, as KAM, what we try to do on behalf of our members is to create that awareness through cleanups, putting up bins in different areas, engaging in media campaigns, engage different partners who can bring in communities just to talk about proper waste management, and other different initiatives that we do,” Okwany says.

Street families clean up the river
Members of the street families clean up the Nairobi River during the street cleanup exercise. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

And as for Mwangi and his friends, they are happy that now they are going to live in a cleaner environment, and that people will no longer shift the blame on them for a dirty city.

“You know now, people will not be looking at us and saying that we are the ones spoiling the city,” Mwangi says as he smiles and enjoys a meal with his friends, provided by the partners at the end of the cleanup exercise.

Chaotic Construction Fuels Climate Change In Zimbabwe

Harare — His house stands out in the midst of water, with the entire driveway concealed under water, apparently with nowhere to step on, yet for 15 years, 50-year-old Jimson Ruvangu in Westlea suburb in the Zimbabwean capital Harare, has managed to evade censure from the city’s local authorities.

Ruvangu claims he acquired the piece of land on which he built his home through a local housing cooperative.

But climate change activists, even as many like Ruvangu are apparently getting away with murder, warn that illegal construction of homes and commercial buildings is fueling climate change impacts across Zimbabwe.

Yet, many like Ruvangu even as they dwell in the midst of wetlands, he (Ruvangu) is happy that he has somewhere to lay his head.

Slums rising
Makeshift homes are rising rapidly on undesignated pieces of land in Harare, the Zimbabwean capital, with pieces of land being cleared of trees prior to the erection of the temporary homes as people invade vacant land in Zimbabwe’s towns and cities, this fueling climate change impacts. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

“I have a home; that is what matters. Whether it was built illegally or not, that is another matter, but look, I am nearing two decades living here and nothing has happened to me,” Ruvangu bragged.

For climate change activists here like Happison Chikova, it is illegal construction that particularly fuels climate change impacts across this Southern African country.

“The haphazard construction of houses in the major cities and towns in Zimbabwe has contributed immensely to climate change in Zimbabwe. The unplanned housing schemes has contributed to high emissions of green-house gases into the atmosphere due to rampant deforestation and destruction of wetlands,” Chikova told Ubuntu Times.

As construction occurs on undesignated places, according to Chikova, ‘the destruction of biodiversity and the ecosystems reduces carbon sequestration as huge amount of carbon dioxide is lost into the atmosphere as vegetation acts as carbon sinks.’

That in fact has not moved illegal urban land occupiers like Ruvangu who claim nothing will move them, but in the eyes of climate change experts like Chikova, many like Ruvangu have brought more harm than good.

Harare illegal mansions
Hundreds of illegally built yet luxurious homes are emerging on undesignated pieces of land, with climate change experts saying this is often taking place on wetlands thereby fueling climate change impacts as the construction of such homes dries up groundwater. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

“The haphazard construction of houses in urban areas is resulting in increasing the heat in the cities, thereby creating heat islands. This is because the houses are not built according to the city standard as well as following green cities foot prints,” said Chikova.

He (Chikova) also said as construction is often done illegally, ‘the destruction of wetlands has affected local climate as the wetlands are responsible for cooling the environment hence increase in temperature.’

Apart from being a holder of a degree in environmental studies from Zimbabwe’s Midlands State University, Chikova is a student at the University of Edinburgh in the UK studying global food security and nutrition.

For Harare Wetlands Trust, a conservation group here, disorderly constructions across Zimbabwe’s wetlands have also fueled climate change impacts.

Rising illegally
Incomplete luxury spacious homes stand out on undesignated land pieces in the capital Harare, where climate change experts say trees important for retaining water vapor in the atmosphere for the accumulation of rains are wantonly cut down paving way for illegal construction of properties. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

“Construction covers wetlands with hard surface. The water can no longer seep into the soils to be stored. So, water runs off and floods on hard surfaces downstream. It is not available underground to keep streams flowing during droughts and dry seasons and we blame climate change when we changed a crucial landscape and contributed to climate change,” Selestino Chari told Ubuntu Times.

To him (Chari), ‘it is effectively an ecocide to build (homes) on something that supports us when we can build elsewhere. And where will all this built-up area get its water from after it runs off the hard surface down to the sea?’ Chari said.

Even the country’s top academics have weighed in, apparently irked by the growing climate change impacts emanating from rife construction on undesignated points here.

One such intellectual is Professor Johnson Masaka, the executive dean at the Midlands State University’s department of Land and Water Resources Management, who has spelt out the harm wrought by the chaotic constructions.

“Firstly, the unplanned constructions will necessarily require that trees, bushes and grasslands are cleared on construction sites. The vegetation that fixes carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas or global warming gas, in photosynthesis is destroyed in the site,” Masaka told Ubuntu Times.

With haphazard construction all over Zimbabwe’s towns and cities, Masaka said climate has had to suffer the results amid wanton cutting down of trees as people in illegally built homes have no access to electricity.

“Provision of electricity in such haphazard settlements is almost impossible due to legal requirements; so, people resort to use of fuel wood. Upon burning, the wood releases a series of global warming gases such as carbon monoxide and methane into the atmosphere where they cause warming of climates,” said Masaka.

But many urban dwellers like 56-year-old Hector Ruvende based in Masvingo, Zimbabwe’s oldest town, see nothing amiss dwelling on a wetland upon which he built his home two decades ago.

“Electricity will be connected to my home one day; what matters is that I have a roof above my head; of course, we use firewood which we buy from wood poachers,” Ruvende told Ubuntu Times.

Home foundation on illegal ground
A foundation is laid out for a home being illegally constructed in one of the suburbs in the Zimbabwean capital Harare, unlawful acts of which climate change experts blame for the rising climate change impacts across Zimbabwe’s towns and cities. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo / Ubuntu Times

Such actions by Zimbabweans like Ruvende, to Professor Masaka, ‘participate in loading the atmosphere with global warming gases.’

Yet even climate change activists in Zimbabwe like Kudakwashe Makanda who is the programmes manager for the Youth Initiative for Community Development (YICD), a youth civic organization, blame disorganized construction for worsening climate change impacts in the country.

“I think you understand that most local authorities have been allocating housing land on wetlands mostly; this then undermines the crucial role that is played by wetlands which is to service the water sources that we do have across the country and also to clean the water; by constructing houses on wetlands, it means the water being reserved or kept there will stop being available,” Makanda told Ubuntu Times.

For Makanda, chaotic urban construction of homes has in fact brought more harm than good.

“Cutting down trees so as to pave way for residential areas also reduces the amount of vegetation that is necessary to supply the atmosphere with water vapor and that alone then leads to less rains being experienced,” said Makanda.

To Makanda, ‘the major challenge is that most local authorities are prioritizing development at the expense of environmental consciousness and the way that they are apportioning the land is not being done in a well thought out manner.’

Yet for independent climate change experts like Gilbert Musungwa in Zimbabwe, corruption in the country’s urban local authorities has fueled illegal construction of homes, subsequently leading to noticeable climate change impacts.

“In other sectors like the construction industry, the issue remains a sub-issue and often overshadowed in the offices; whenever there is an intention to have some infrastructural development, oftentimes environmental impact assessments (EIA) are requested. It boggles the mind how some developments pass the required EIA,” Musungwa told Ubuntu Times.

Gold Mining Boom In Uganda Fuels Mercury Pollution, Spells Doom For The Environment

It’s before sunrise but artisanal gold miner Rose Namukasa is already scouring muddy water for small nuggets of gold in this mining area in Mubende, central Uganda, one of the largest gold mining headlands in the country, where mercury is a staple.

Armed with a basin, the 30-year old mixes muddy water with mercury with her bare hands without protective gloves, ignoring the risk of mercury poisoning, an early link to wide-ranging mercury pollution that has affected most gold mining areas of Uganda.

Artisanal gold mining in Uganda fuels mercury pollution
Women mine for gold using mercury to recover minute pieces of gold that are mixed in soil and sediments. The use of mercury poses health risks for the miners. Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

“If I don’t work what will my 4 children eat? they will starve, I don’t have money for gloves either,” says the single mother.

A gold rush in Uganda has spiked demand for mercury as artisan miners seek to cash in on the highly demanded precious metal amid climbing international prices.

Namukasa is among the over 300,000 artisan and small-scale gold miners in Uganda who produce most of the country’s gold while they risk their lives every day, working in dangerous conditions.

“Mercury use is totally unacceptable and the government will revoke licenses of miners that are found using this dangerous chemical,” said Sarah Opendi Achieng the Minister of State for Energy and Mineral Development, at a recent national citizens’ conference on mining.

Uganda’s mining sector is dominated by artisan and small scale miners whose activities are largely unmonitored and unregulated. In gold mines, mercury is used to recover pieces of gold mixed in soil and sediments. Mercury and gold are combined together to form a gold-mercury amalgam. Gold is then extracted by vaporizing the mercury. The remnants of this amalgam then percolate into the soil or flow to the nearby environment, eventually finding their way into water streams. This poses a great danger to local communities and the environment in gold mining areas.

Although mercury is a naturally occurring element, it is highly toxic to humans, animals, and the environment when not handled properly. Prolonged and high exposure to mercury by inhalation damages the nervous, digestive, and immune systems.

Artisanal gold mining in Uganda fuels mercury pollution
Artisan gold miners engage in the use of hazardous chemicals to mine gold as mining activities go on unregulated and unmonitored by the government. Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

A recent research report by Water Governance Institute a local environmental organization titled Mining Industry’s Compliance to Social and Environmental Safeguards in Uganda found that mercury levels around gold mining areas of Kitumbi and Kasana sub-counties in Mubende were four times higher than the safe limit established by the World Health Organization WHO. The researchers analyzed 20 samples of water and soil collected from different gold mining sites where mercury is used including gardens and water bodies around these mining sites.

The report co-author Henry Bazira says that gold mining communities need to be monitored and educated about the dangers of using mercury in gold mining.

“Mercury pollution is a serious issue not just for communities in Mubende but the entire population is at risk of exposure because of the cumulative effect of mercury releases in the environment,” he said.

The report also states that several gold miners interviewed complained of unusual symptoms such as convulsions, loss of muscle coordination, miscarriages, paralysis, anemia, and tremors all of which are symptoms of mercury poisoning.

“No bio-monitoring of mercury effects on humans has been undertaken in Uganda and we lack capacity at medical level to fully diagnose mercury-related ailments,” says Bazira.

He adds that the government should work towards making alternatives such as borax affordable and accessible. “Borax is a better option because it breaks down in water due to its high affinity for oxygen but remains expensive for these communities”

Artisanal gold mining in Uganda fuels mercury pollution
Mercury laced water is disposed off anyhow in the open finding its way into the surrounding environment. Diana Taremwa Karakire / Ubuntu Times

Mercury use in gold mining also flouts the Minamata Convention on mercury which Uganda became a signatory to in 2013. The objective of the convention is to protect human health and the environment from the anthropogenic emissions and releases of mercury and mercury compounds. Article 3 of the convention, seeks to reduce global mercury pollution through complementary measures to minimize mercury supply and demand.

Mercury pollution is also one of the causes of climate change that is already a reality in Uganda. Mercury’s interaction with air forms mercury oxide which contributes to the depletion of the ozone layer. Smuggling of mercury across the country’s porous borders is also common.

Uganda is endowed with a vast array of metallic and industrial minerals that have the potential to be developed commercially however most of these remain essentially under-developed.

The increase in international commodity prices triggered a number of processes in the country including putting in place laws to guide and govern the emerging minerals sector and conducting aerial-magnetic geological studies to determine the mineral deposits in the country.

A World Bank-funded survey divided Uganda into six blocks and found that western Uganda, which borders the mineral-rich but restive Eastern Congo the most endowed. The country’s central region also holds huge potential.

Three years ago, a Belgium-based refinery set up a $20 million gold plant in the country. Statistics from the ministry of trade indicate that gold exports fetch $1 billion every year and have overtaken coffee as Uganda’s leading export commodity.

According to Vincent Kedi the Principal Engineer on mining at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development of Uganda, the new legal framework to govern mining activities in the country -the mining and minerals bill 2019 will soon be tabled in Parliament.

The old law which is the mining act of 2003 was lax on enforcing compliance to social and environmental safeguards in mining activities, penalties for noncompliance as well as mitigation and rehabilitation strategies.

“We are trying to expedite the process to put in place a new mining law. The new law has taken great care to address most of the challenges in the sector including mercury use in gold mining and stringent penalties for environmental degradation ”. He added that monitoring mining activities had been affected by the outbreak of COVID-19 and the national lockdown.

A Million Livelihoods In Kenya, Tanzania At Risk As Mara River Fish Driven To Extinction

By &

Rorya, Tanzania — At Koryo village, in Tanzania’s northern Rorya district brightly dressed women flock to the river with piles of their laundry bags.

Some of them walk for hours just to be on time to access an increasingly endangered resource: water.

Nestled on the Tanzanian border with Kenya, the village receives enough rainfall, but for some reason, the water doesn’t meet the growing needs of the inhabitants.

“We have lost six permanent rivers in the past two decades,” says 57-year-old Andrew Nyamaka a local resident, adding “When the dry season sets in finding water is a constant struggle.”

Endangered Livelihoods

Depleting water resources in this impoverished village highlight the worsening plights of people in the wider Mara basin whose lives are increasingly endangered.

Mara river degradation
Hippopotamuses usually suffer in the dry season due to water abstraction. Zuberi Mussa / Ubuntu Times

The livelihoods of 1.1 million people in Kenya and Tanzania are on the brink as fish are driven to extinction, according to WWF.

A new report by the wildlife NGO says the trans-boundary river is threatened by among others, unsustainable farming, deforestation, mining, illegal fishing, and invasive species.

The report, which examined freshwater biodiversity in the river basin identified 473 native freshwater species including four mammals, 88 water birds, 126 freshwater associated birds, four reptiles, 20 amphibians, 40 fishes, 50 invertebrate species, and 141 vascular plants.

According to the report, some fish species including; Niangua, Singed and Victoria tilapia are critically endangered and increasingly threatened by the Nile perch that had been introduced in Lake Victoria.

Birds Too At Risk 

The report also listed some bird and fish species including Madagascar pond-heron, grey crowned crane, and killifish as endangered whereas the shoebill, and some crab and freshwater mussel species, are described as vulnerable.

Amani Ngusaru, country director, WWF Tanzania said the river is under huge pressure from destructive human activities such as unsustainable agriculture, tourist facilities, water pollution, and land degradation.

Gold extraction is one of the destructive activities
An artisanal gold miner displays his refined find. Credit: Zuberi Mussa / Ubuntu Times

“Several aquatic species have not been seen for many years and may be extinct before they have been studied,” he said in the report.

His remarks were echoed by Yunus Mgaya, professor of Marine Biology at the University of Dar es Salaam, who concurs with the report saying that the farming and irrigation activities have seriously affected the river flow and ecological balance of the basin.

“The basin is facing a bleak future that put the river at risk, unless deliberate efforts are taken to reverse this trend many livelihoods will suffer,” he told the Ubuntu Times.

As the world is grappling with rapid decline of freshwater biodiversity due to the changing weather patterns, WWF is calling for joint efforts to preserve critically endangered freshwater biodiversity.

Tourist Attraction

The Mara basin, which sprawls across 13,750 sq km is home to many plant and animal species. Known for its great spectacle of wildebeest and zebra migration, the area attracts tourists who inject millions of dollars in Kenya and Tanzania economies.

Gold mining at Rorya
A group of artisanal miners working close to the river. Credit: Zuberi Mussa / Ubuntu Times

Tourism plays a pivotal role in the economies of both countries. The sector provides direct employment to thousands of people and contributes roughly US$1 billion to the economies of Kenya and Tanzania.

The Maasai Mara National Park, for instance, attracts more than 300,000 visitors every year, bringing roughly Kenyan Shillings 650 million, or 8 percent of the country’s total tourism earnings.

Water Abstraction

As the only water source in the dry season, the Mara River, which runs through Maasai Mara Game Reserve in Kenya and the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania, has experienced erratic flow, partly due to the abstraction of water for irrigation and hydropower.

The basin and its adjoining wetland is under increasing strain due to farming, overgrazing and irrigation activities, which have affected the quality of water and the flow of the river.

Fishing and agriculture are the main economic activities and sources of livelihood for many people in the Mara basin. More than 80% of the population in communities around the swamp are engaging in farming and fishing.

Local residents both in Kenya and Tanzania rely on fish and other aquatic foods harvested in ponds, lakes, and rivers to get healthy diets for their families and livelihoods.

Rose Kasoka, a 44-year-old fish vendor travels far to buy a stock of dried fish to sell at retail price.

“I don’t realize much profit because I don’t often get Ningu which most customers love,” she said.

Reversing Deforestation

In the village of Ikoma, Waridi Mwita, a 51-year-old farmer, is busy packing soil into plastic seedling bags. She’s trying to plant trees in the hope to restore forest cover that has long been destroyed.

“People are very busy making charcoal, they don’t realize they are destroying the environment and are preparing for their own extinction,” Mwita told the Ubuntu Times.

Deforestation especially in the Mau Forest and dry-season soil erosion have exacerbated the effects of drought as the water level drops to its lowest ebb, consequently affecting humans and wildlife.

Indigenous forests have been logged for timber and charcoal burning.

“One of the reasons trees are cut down is to produce charcoal, which is a lucrative business in these communities,” Mwita said.

In this tiny village, perched on groves of banana trees, water was once plentiful. But due to spells of drought, most small rivers have dried out.

Wildebeests
Recurring drought spells have affected migration patterns of wildebeests. Credit: Zuberi Mussa / Ubuntu Times

“When I was young, my parents never experienced water problems that we experience today,” she said.

According to WWF report, the quality of water in the Mara River is also affected by domestic waste whose disposal has negatively affected aquatic life by reducing fish spawning sites and even clog their gills.

“Heavy metal contamination from mining activities is posing a huge risk to ecology and people,” the report warned.

Zimbabwe Farmers Embrace Conservation Agriculture To Beat Effects Of Climate Change

Marange, Zimbabwe — It is a windy day in Marange, Chanakira village. Small clouds scuddle the blue sky giving it a blurred look. About 110 kilometers southwest of Mutare, Norah Mwastuku (48) a subsistence farmer sits at the verandah and contemplates when the first rains will arrive. 

She anxiously looks at her fields, decorated with mulched holes.

Mwastuku is one of the farmers who have embraced the Pfumvudza program — a concept where crops are planted on zero tillage in a bid to conserve water and inputs on a small piece of land.

She is enthusiastic about the program and is looking forward to the new season. 

“I have already dug holes in a 39 meters by 16 meters piece of land. This coming season I am planning to grow maize,” the mother of four told Ubuntu Times.

This area does not receive much rain and farmers like Mwastuku rely on boreholes to water their fields. The soils are tired too. 

While the government is currently popularizing the Pfumvudza program, Mwastuku is used to it. In the season 2019/2020, she grew maize and sorghum at the same size of land as part of Pfumvudza.

“I had a good harvest. This is what we are surviving on as a family,” she said. The farming concept is increasingly becoming popular among farmers in areas that receive less rainfall. 

Lilian Murangariri (50), a small-holder farmer from Headlands, about 140 kilometers from the capital Harare says Pfumvudza has less labor.

“Last year I grew orange maize and white maize in a half-hectare piece of land. I was amazed with the harvest. As a farmer you do not have to stress about using cows for tillage as this is zero tillage,” she told Ubuntu Times.

The mother of three says Pfumvudza is economic and can be practiced by farmers who do not have enough farming machinery. 

“The holes and mulch conserve water. I can still harvest my crops even if there is poor rain. I also use less inputs such as fertilizer,” said Murangariri.

Mwastuku and Murangariri are some of the over 9,000 people who have embraced Pfumvudza with the support from the Zimbabwe Livelihoods and Food Security Programme (LFSP).

Pfumvudza concept is helping rural women to end hunger in their communities
Pfumvudza concept maximizes on a small piece of land with less agricultural inputs to produce a good harvest. Credit: FAO

The LFSP, which is funded by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), is managed by United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and implemented by Welthungerhilfe, Practical Action and World Vision.

It is aimed at reducing poverty, targeting 250,000 rural farming households through improved food and nutrition security and incomes in 10 districts in Zimbabwe.

LFSP trained over 50,000 farmers from their clusters in Manicaland, Midlands, and Mashonaland Provinces in 2019.

For the past half a decade Zimbabwe has been having incessant droughts and floods which, according to experts, are caused by climate change. 

Nearly 8 million people, about half of Zimbabwe’s population, are food insecure, according to the United Nations’ World Food Programme.

The southern African nation, which was once the breadbasket of the continent, will import an estimated 1.1 million tonnes of grain in the 2020/2021 marketing year to meet demand, according to the FAO.

This Pfumvudza concept which was spearheaded by FAO last season in Zimbabwe has been adopted by the President Emmerson Mnangagwa led government in the 2020/2021 season targeting nearly 2 million households, about 10 million people. 

The government is supporting these farmers with inputs.

Prudence Mucharwa, a small-holder farmer in Chihota near Marondera, about 70 kilometers from the capital Harare, said she is new to the concept.

“I joined Pfumvudza a bit late. I met an Agritex officer who explained it to me. The Grain Marketing Board will loan me inputs and I will pay back with maize or soya meal,” she said.

A mulched maize crop
Mulching which is part of the Pfumvudza concept helps in water conservation ideal in drought-hit areas in rural Zimbabwe. Credit: FAO

Lands ministry permanent secretary John Bhasera explains more about the program. 

“Pfumvudza is simply conservation agriculture. This is basically conservation which has been nationalized. It has minimum soil disturbance as well as mulching creating a blanket of cover so that you can conserve moisture. Crop rotation as well, we have three farming sectors—one for [a certain type of] cereal, another for [a different] cereal and the last for other crops,” he said.

Zimbabwe has been having farming schemes for the past decades but still, farmers are producing grain not enough to feed the nation. 

There is a need for new tactics. 

“We now have a new extension approach which is called Train, Track and Monitor (TTM). We have sourced motorcycles for our agriculture extension workers across the country so that they are able to practice the TTM approach. We started with training. We trained the Agritex officers for nearly a month. Now the extension officers are training farmers,” Bhasera said

Farmers preparing the land for Pfumvudza on zero tillage
Pfumvudza concept is a zero tillage program that is considered cheap and time-saving by farmers. Credit: FAO

Olga Nhari, Women in Agriculture Union chairperson speaks glowingly about the program. 

“Of the three plots one produces yield sufficient for family and the other two plots for national storage,” she said.

Nhari said Pfumvudza helps rural women, especially, to fight against hunger and to improve livelihoods. 

Zimbabwe Farmers Union executive director Paul Zakariya said there was a need to reverse the current state of affairs, where Zimbabwe has remained a net importer of staple cereals.

“It is not desirable that a country that has excellent agricultural lands and enjoys excellent climatic conditions, should import all its food,” he said.

In the past, farming schemes have been marred by corruption in the distribution of inputs as well as loan allocations. Some experts fear that the culture might continue under the Pfumvudza program.

“To say it is an opportunity to loot funds needs intelligence on whether the program will have a budget allocation and the actual implementation of the project in terms of funds or inputs allocation,” Harare based economist Victor Bhoroma told Ubuntu Times.

“However, almost all the country’s agricultural subsidy programs have flopped because of politicization of inputs distribution, corruption, inefficient funding or repayment models and lack of private capital participation which is tied to complicated land tenure policies,”

He said most of these agriculture programs are more political than economic of which in politics, the end justifies the means, hence, the government can pursue an economically costly program because it serves political interests.

Farmers doing land preparation for Pfumvudza
Land preparation for Pfumvudza concept is often done soon after harvest while some in winter and others in summer. Credit: FAO

Another economist Vince Musewe said Zimbabwe has invested in previous farming schemes but the country still imports grain.

“We have invested billions (of dollars) in Command Agriculture and we still have to import. We, however, need a new mindset that farming is a business and not a hobby where farmers expect to get free inputs,” said Musewe adding that a strong private sector drive in agriculture is important.

Zakariya said there is a need to put in place measures to curb abuse of inputs under such schemes. 

“Without effective and efficient systems, the world over, abuse can be rampant,” he said.

From Pfumvudza, the government is expecting about 1.8 million tonnes of grain, which is almost 90 percent of the national food requirements.

During the 2020/21 season, the LFSP aims to incorporate agroecology aspects as subsistence farmers like Mwastuku realize the fruits of their sweat. 

It is hoped that agroecology will better climate-proof smallholder agriculture production and will ensure nutrition for 50,000 households. 

Deforestation Endangers Kilimanjaro’s Tourism

Kilimanjaro, Tanzania — As firefighters were battling raging inferno on Mt. Kilimanjaro, plumes of smoke belching into the sky captured the destruction on Africa’s highest mountain and its surrounding ecosystems.

The fast-spreading bushfire erupted at an overnight resting camp for hikers—provoked roaring flames that have destroyed one of the world’s richest and most diverse ecosystems.

World’s Tallest Mountain

Kilimanjaro, the world’s tallest free-standing mountain at 5,895 meters (19,341 feet) above sea level, is highly vulnerable to environmental degradation partly caused by worsening impacts of climate change and increasing human activities.

Rampant illegal logging, poaching wildfires, pollution, and beekeeping have encroached on the ecosystem around the mountain, thus disturbing a forest belt surrounding it, officials said.

The snow-capped mountain, which attracts thousands of tourists every year, is a UNESCO Heritage Site with rare plants and animal species.

Tourism is a cornerstone of Tanzania’s economy, contributing about 17.2% to the country’s GDP and 25% of all foreign exchange revenues. The sector, which employs more than 600,000 people, generated approximately $2.4 billion in 2018, government statistics show.

Favorite Tourist Destination

As one of Africa’s favorite tourist destinations, Kilimanjaro is known for its breath-taking attractions, including stunning landscapes dotted with wildlife, waterfalls, and rich cultural heritage.

However, activists are increasingly worried about the rapid shrinking of the natural forests cover.

“We must do something to prevent frequent fire outbreaks,” said Eliakim Meena, an environmental activist from Nkweshoo cultural tourism program in Kilimanjaro.

Illegal Logging

As the country’s best tourist attraction Mount Kilimanjaro generates an estimated US$ 50 million in revenue annually but is vulnerable to environmental risks, local experts said. Padili Mikomangwa, a Dar es Salaam based environmentalist said native forest and shrubs are being destroyed by illegal loggers and beekeepers, consequently disturbing rainfall patterns.

“The forest itself is the key element in this. It completely affects the amount of rain running off the mountain,” he said.

With less rainfall on the lower slopes, the snow on the summit is also shrinking.

Mikomangwa said forests that vanished in the past four decades on Kilimanjaro’s lower slopes — felled by villagers for charcoal and open farmland — were just as much to blame as rising heat.

Extreme Weather

The extreme weather currently experienced in Kilimanjaro is a surprise to many local residents, who are used to a cold misty climate.

Jacob Chuwa, 72, a resident of Moshi, told Ubuntu Times that the annual rainfall has been declining from year to year, affecting the livelihoods of farmers.

“We have never experienced such erratic weather before, it is quite surprising,” he said.

While trees play an important role in maintaining natural water cycles around Mt. Kilimanjaro, Meena said its forest cover is rapidly waning.

Fandey Mashimba acting Manager, (Seed Biology) at Tanzania Forest Services Agency said deforestation is driven by increasing energy needs as people are engaging in charcoal making.

“It is a huge problem and most of it is happening because people don’t have energy supplies so they are cutting down the trees to make charcoal,” Mashimba said

Government Intervention

According to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), reduced rainfall and increasing temperatures around Kilimanjaro have triggered the mountain’s vulnerability to fire and deforestation.

However, the government is taking measures to fight illegal logging and to educate local people on the importance of conserving their environment.

“We have several tree-planting initiatives and local residents are actively participating in the schemes,” said Anna Mngwira Kilimanjaro Regional Commissioner.

Jane Masawe, who lives on the western slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro, uses a traditional inter-cropping method in her farm to grow a mix of coffee, bananas, and vegetables.

The 47-year-old farmer is profoundly attached to the environment, for she knows her family directly depend on the natural ecosystems of the mountain.

Masawe, who displays a vast indigenous knowledge of her environment, has respect for natural resources.

“Most of the perennial streams flowing down had dried up due to deforestation in the catchment area,” she said.

Changing Weather Patterns

Rapid population growth, changing weather patterns, increasing deforestation have resulted in worsening soil erosion, soil infertility, and an increase in damaging surface runoff, which resulted in decreased land productivity and food insecurity.

To address those issues Masawe has adopted sustainable farming practices and land management technologies to restore productivity.

“I was trained to use bench terraces, to conserve soil and water. They help to reduce the slope steepness and prevent loss of soil downhill,” she said.

The Resource Curse: Indigenous Pastoral Communities And Africa’s Largest Wind Power Tussle In Kenya’s Arid North

Sarima, Marsabit County —In Sarima, a dry, desolate land, traditionally seen as too inhospitable to inhabit in the corner of Kenya’s north sits the country’s largest private investment. Upon completion, it was projected to become Africa’s biggest wind farm project.

For over one year, long trucks were seen carrying strange-looking cargo as they made their way into what was a barren landscape just ten years ago.

The pastoralist inhabitants of Marsabit County say at least two convoys would go along the route every other day. Their destination is a field of 365 powerful wind turbines strategically placed along with one of the windiest corridors in Kenya.

Set in the remote north of Kenya, 700 km from the capital Nairobi, the Lake Turkana Wind power (LTWP) is expected to generate some 300mw of clean energy.

Power is transmitted over 428km and six counties away to Suswa in Kenya’s Rift Valley in a transmission line built by a government agency, the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company ( KETRACO).

Africa Development Bank calls it ‘one of the best private investments in Kenya yet. The project is co-owned by among others Vestas and several other Scandinavian investors.

KETRACO had contracted Isolux Corsan, a Spanish company to build a transmission line but a few kilometers into the project, it declared bankruptcy, stalling things temporarily.

To keep the project running, the Kenyan government awarded a Chinese company the responsibility of completing the transmission line.

KP & P Africa BV, a company of Dutch and Kenyan investors and the initiator of the project also owns LTWP Limited.

Community land acquisition raises questions

However, there are some questions on how the Lake Turkana Wind Power Project came to own the land considering that ten years ago when nobody wanted to come here, this was ancestral land for pastoral communities.

President Uhuru Kenyatta in Marsabit
President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya unveils the Lake Turkana Wind Farm project plague Marsabit County. LTWP is Africa’s largest wind farm project. Credit: Lake Turkana Wind Power (LTWP)

Sixty-year-old Simon Ekitoye has lived in Sarima all his life. He was among the first beneficiaries of what villagers claim was a lot of promises of jobs that the development would bring to Sarima.

“They employed me for two and a half years here to supervise the evacuation of villagers and to demarcate land lots for their respective owners,”  Ekitoye told Ubuntu Times in an interview.

Ekitoye and a few others helped in mobilizing residents to move the village off the path of the road developed so that developers could access the site, this happening alongside compensation for their homes.

Sarima village was relocated in 2014, moving 1km away from its original location to pave way for an access road to the project’s site.

The people of Sarima village are part of the indigenous community that calls the Sarima hills and plains their homes.

Original residents like Ekitoye claimed that they were each paid $100 to rebuild their homes. This community, having seen little development since before Kenya’s independence, was keen on advancing itself.

“They promised to build schools, hospitals, provide us employment and plenty of water. In the end, they only dug us one borehole,” says Ekitoye.

Lack of formal education means no permanent employment for locals. Patrick Ole Kaunga, a human rights activist, says LTWP is a highly technical project that does not rely on unskilled manpower to run.

Ole Kaunga says LWTP representatives first approached the Municipal Council of Marsabit in 2007, seeking 40,000 acres of land for the project. Then they asked for a further 110,000 acres which they claim was for ‘future development’.

“The case that the community has confronted since 2014 has been how 150,000 acres of community land was alienated.,” Amina Hashi, a community land lawyer, said in an interview.

According to Ole Kaunga, the board of a divisional land was never set up to consult with the community. Instead, the Marsabit County Council town planning committee was the body that approved the leasing of 150,000 acres of land to LTWP.

But on his part, Charles Keter, the Cabinet Secretary for Energy disputes claims that the community was never consulted before the communal land take-over for the establishment of the Ksh. 70 billion wind power project.

For Hashi, her client’s concern is simple: how did the investor acquire the land?’ A question she says has never been answered in court.

“This was never given the prominence we thought it deserved it being an environment and land court whose specific mandate is to address the land question,” says Hashima.

An influx of people leads to environmental hazards

Before the establishment of LTWP, Sarima was a much smaller village but has grown from under 500 to over 1500 residents as people move in to look for jobs and businesses.

There has been a change in Sarima though. According to Ole Kaunga, when one looks around, there is a lot of business.

“Every small hut is a pub or a shop. It tells you money is circulating. On the other hand, the level of alcoholism has increased. There are even prostitutes. It is not the Sarima we used to know,” laments Ole Kaunga.

Wind turbines
Huge wind turbines during setting up of the wind power farm in Marsabit by the Lake Turkana Wind Power (LTWP). Credit: LTWP

Josphine Ngumi runs a bar at the far end of this tightly packed village. She shares the same concerns as Ekiteiyo as well as the same hopes.

“There are no hospitals. They said they would build some, but they have not. They built a school but there are no teachers. The children return home without having been taught,” Ngumi told Ubuntu Times.

Once complete, the 365 wind turbines would catapult Kenya into a league of clean energy producers, a rare status for an African nation.

“We were not exposed to alcohol but when these people moved here their employees introduced alcohol and soft drinks. They even made their own alcohol,” says Ekiteiyo.

Ekiteiyo’s worry would be for his source of livelihood, the livestock saying garbage piles and plastic threaten to kill animals.

This story was written as part of the Sustainable Energy for All fellowship, by Climate Tracker and Hivos.

Uganda’s Quest For Sustainable Energy Poses Fresh Environmental Threats

A flurry of oil and gas discoveries along Uganda’s western border has lured dozens of investors seeking to develop sub-Saharan Africa’s largest oil discovery in decades. However, renewed interest in the once-neglected Lake Albertine rift basin is also creating new problems—tilting the region’s energy needs towards fossil fuels, channeled through the world’s longest heated pipeline the East African Crude Oil Pipeline EACOP, which campaigners say is a big threat to the environment. 

On a hilly slope in central Uganda, farmer Vicky Najjemba looks over her sprawling coffee plantation and house. She says she is being forced to vacate to pave way for the 900-mile pipeline project. After getting a solar power connection to her 3 bedroom house two years ago, Ms. Najjemba, a single mother, planned to raise her 4 children here. She now fears she may be forced to relocate with her family, even though her long-promised compensation of $7000 is yet to arrive.

“It’s very disappointing,” said the 37-year old mother, fighting back tears. “This is my ancestral land, why should I be pushed, the future looks so uncertain.”

Ms. Najemba is among the 12,000 families being forced off their land to pave way for the project. She expressed frustration at being told not to undertake any further activities on the land.  Ms. Najjemba who struggles to feed her family will also likely lose her coffee farm, a situation she says risks pushing her to the brink.

The Great Disputed Oil Highway

Multinational companies led by French oil giant Total SA are continuing with plans to build a $3.5 billion pipeline, drawing the ire of environmentalists. A group of at least 30 international and local campaign groups say that the pipeline, which will cross vast marshland and rivers, poses unacceptable risks to water and biodiversity.

The pipeline, which is expected to carry some 200,000 barrels-a-day of crude oil to the Tanzanian port of Tanga will require heating to 50 degrees Celsius because the oil is low in sulfur and will otherwise solidify in the pipe.

Uganda and Tanzania sign Uganda and Tanzania sign $3.5bn oil pipeline deal
Magufuli and Museveni meet in Chato-Tanzania to sign Oil Pipeline Agreement. Credit: Presidential Press Unit

It will cross Lake Victoria, one of the world’s largest freshwater lakes, where an oil spill could prove disastrous for over 30 million people that rely on the lake’s watershed for drinking water and food production.

“Although Uganda has relatively low historical greenhouse gas emissions, for many reasons, no new fossil fuel project is justifiable,” said Deborah Ramalope, Head of climate policy at Climate Analytics a non-profit science and policy institute based in Germany. “Investments in fossil fuel have a high risk of locking it in emissions for many years”.

Uganda has attracted some of the largest investments in its oil industry over the past decade, with companies including Total, Tullow Oil and China’s Cnooc Ltd investing more than $ 4 billion in exploration activities that have resulted in the discovery of around 6 billion barrels of crude.

However, local authorities are struggling to contain mounting anger among local campaign groups, who accuse the Government of favoring international investors at the expense of residents, who have for generations inhabited the region.

Local campaigners have launched an online petition with 350.org Don’t finance the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline – 350 and through Bank Track called on international financing institutions to avoid financing the project BankTrack – East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP).

Despite promises of compensation and employment, local communities have also expressed their concerns regarding the impact the project will have on their lives as detailed in the recently published Environmental and Social Impact Assessment for Ugandan side of the EACOP. Communities raised numerous concerns over land acquisition and compensation for loss of land, livelihoods, and properties.

Communities affected by the pipeline are already suffering as the project developers placed a cut-off date on their property in 2019, they stopped people from utilizing their land for new developments such as growing of perennial crops, setting up of houses and others. The developers’ actions resulted in the abuse of communities’ economic, cultural, and social rights. Developers denied the accusations.

A consultative meeting between environmental activists and pipeline affected people
A local leader tries to calm the pipeline affected people during a consultative meeting in Madudu-Mubende district, central Uganda. Credit: Civil Society Coalition on Oil and Gas (CSCO)

Sande Amanya, one of the affected people, a resident of Mubende district in central Uganda vows not to abandon his home and banana plantation unless he is fully compensated and relocated. Mr. Amanya, whose house is not connected to electricity or running water, relies on a nearby well for water.

“We were stopped from cultivating our fields within the pipeline path, it’s now 2 years and we have not received any payment, yet we are not using our properties,” he says. 

“This whole thing is so destabilizing.”

Relocation and loss of land from the pipeline threaten the employment and livelihoods of tens of thousands of people.

A local natural resources officer of Mubende district, Vincent Kinene, fears that the project will interrupt access across villages because crisscrossing the pipeline route is not possible.

“Outside the long-promised jobs and hyped local transformation, there will likely be a spike in land and access related conflicts,” he says.

According to Kinene, the quoted mitigations in the Environmental and Social Impact report are generic and not locality specific. The lack of thoroughness at that stage is an indicator of spills to come.

While the government claims that oil developments will increase energy supply and lower the overall cost of power generation in Uganda, environmentalists are concerned about the colossal impact of oil developments on the environment. They say that since Uganda has a huge capacity of potential renewable energy that can be readily tapped into. So why turn to non-renewable fossil fuels? 

“Government’s insistence on developing oil resources is coming at the expense of providing clean, affordable, and reliable energy options such as off grid solar,” says Dickens Kamugisha the executive director at Africa Institute for Energy Governance, a local Non-Governmental Organization spearheading the campaign to stop the project.

Instead of investing resources in off grid energy options that have the potential to meet the energy needs of the poorest, the government is spending money investing in oil, which will not guarantee access to clean, affordable, and reliable power. 

Uganda, which has one of the highest population growth rates in the world according to the World Bank, already cannot keep pace with its energy demands.

Current Energy Situation

Uganda meets more than 93% of its energy demand with biomass in form of charcoal and firewood, 6% with fossil fuel combustion, and only 1% with electricity from hydro and fossil-fuelled thermal power plants, according to statistics from the Ministry of Energy. The country currently imports all its petroleum-product requirements.

Only about 15% of the population has access to electricity, and in rural areas, it’s only 7%. Majority of the population continue to rely on wood fuel and charcoal. This has resulted in the depletion of the country’s forests and woodlands, and related health hazards. In the past 25 years, Uganda has lost 63% of its forest cover due to tree-cutting for firewood, timber and charcoal, according to the National Forest Authority. The loss of these fragile ecosystems not only has serious implications on Uganda’s biodiversity but also compromises the ability of the country to cope with the climate change.

Some activists believe that the pipeline project is not the best option for the country given its current development status. “Uganda should rather look for opportunities to diversify its economy by investing in clean energy projects which have the potential to  generate multiple sustainable development benefits”, says Ramalope

Uganda’s energy sector has experienced an over-emphasis on Hydropower and petroleum as the most important energy assets overlooking other potential sources. This development path experts say is being driven by an appetite for large portfolio infrastructure projects that offer political mileage.

Overreliance on hydropower dams most of which are located along the River Nile has plunged Uganda into years of chronic electricity shortages, load shedding, high tariffs, and low levels of electricity penetration, especially in rural areas.

Effects of climate change, as well as environmental degradation, have continuously undermined the hydrology on River Nile, decimating the power generation capacity of the hydropower plants along the river, a situation that has brought about power supply shortages in the country. 

It’s thus clear that an expanded and diversified range of renewable power sources is critical in solving the country’s energy needs.

Energy development in Uganda and environmental damage are intricately related. The energy sector has bigger environmental impacts than other economic sectors. Hence, energy investments in Uganda are subject to greater environmental scrutiny.

In 2006, Uganda confirmed the existence of commercially viable quantities of oil in the Albertine basin. According to the Petroleum Authority of Uganda, oil reserve estimates remain at 6 billion barrels. The international oil companies finalized the exploration phase and are now preparing to undertake the development phase, which will subsequently lead to the production in 2023. Output is expected to peak at 220,000 barrels-a-day of crude, Uganda consumes around 15,000 barrels-a-day of crude, the remainder will be exported.

The Government expects that the development of the oil and gas industry will accelerate economic growth, job creation, contribute to poverty eradication, and improve the general prosperity of Uganda.

Uganda and Tanzania sign Uganda and Tanzania sign $3.5bn oil pipeline deal
Magufuli and Museveni meet in Chato-Tanzania to sign Oil Pipeline Agreement. Credit: Presidential Press Unit

Once produced, part of the crude oil will be refined in Uganda to supply the local market while the rest will be exported to the international market through the pipeline. The Uganda National Oil Company and the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation will be shareholders in the pipeline which will be developed, constructed and operated by Total E&P Uganda B.V, Tullow Uganda Operations Pty Limited and CNOOC Uganda Limited.

In Uganda, the pipeline covers 296Km and traverses 10 districts, 22 sub-counties, 4 town councils, 41 parishes and an estimated 172 villages. 

Robert Magori, Africa Communications Manager at 350.org, says environmentalists consider the pipeline a “disastrous project” because of the threat it poses to the environment, society and the associated economic risks.

“The international scientific community is telling us that the world cannot absorb any new fossil fuel developments if we are to tackle the climate crisis,” he says.

The emissions from burning the oil transported through the pipeline alone are estimated at 33 million tonnes of CO2 per year, according to 350.org.

According to a 2017 report by World Wildlife Fundthe pipeline project overlaps several wildlife habitats including 510 km of African Elephant Habitat, important biodiversity and natural habitats, water resources and marine coastal ecosystems. The pipeline will deliver oil to a port located in an area rich in mangroves and coral reef, as well as adjacent to two ecologically or biologically significant marine areas.

Last month, an oil spill off the coast of Mauritius caused extensive ecological damage when Japanese-owned cargo ship MV Wakashio ran aground on a coral reef, leaking 1,000 tons of oil onto pristine coasts. The spill left a 15-kilometer stretch of the coastline — an internationally recognized biodiversity hotspot — smeared with oil causing an ecological emergency.

Proscovia Nabbanja, the chief executive officer of the state oil company, Uganda National Oil Company says that the government plans several initiatives to lessen the impact of the project on the environment. 

“Sector players are really working hard to ensure they limit the impact on the environment.” She said, “Total, for example, introduced the cable less technology in the acquisition of seismic data because we are working in a National Park.” 

Immense Clean Energy Potential

Uganda is richly endowed with renewable energy resources for clean energy production and the provision of energy services that are fairly distributed throughout the country.

According to Uganda’s renewable energy policy, the overall renewable energy power generation potential is estimated to be 5,300 MW. Hydro and biomass are considered to have the largest potential for electricity generation, enough to power the entire east African regions’ five nations, experts say.

Geothermal energy resources remain unexploited. So far, three potential areas all situated in western Uganda, in the western branch of the East African Rift Valley have been identified for detailed exploration.  The three potential areas are Katwe-Kikorongo, Buranga and Kibiro. Based on recent assessments, they have all been ranked as potential targets for geothermal development with temperature levels that vary between 150 C° and 200 C° which is sufficient for electricity generation and for direct use in industry and agriculture. 

The average solar radiation is 5.1 kWh/m 2/day and it is the renewable energy resource on the market with the highest adoption rate in Uganda.  Existing solar data clearly indicates that Uganda’s position near the equator grants the country high solar energy resources throughout the year. 

All this renewable energy potential therefore can be harnessed for diversification of Uganda’s energy sector which can contribute greatly to de-carbonizing the sector.

Uganda is signatory to the Paris agreement and according to Uganda’s Nationally Determined Contributions, the country has committed to a 22% emission cut on a business as usual basis by 2030 in a bid to mitigate and adapt to climate change and transit to a low-carbon climate-resilient economy.

Government hopes to do this by increasing renewable energy deployment and achieving a total of at least 3,200 MW renewable electricity generation capacities by 2030. 

“Government should seek to promote investment in more sustainable energy options as opposed to rushing to commence oil projects which endanger our environment and people,” says Kamugisha. “Uganda has plenty of low-carbon energy options.”

This story was written as part of the Sustainable Energy for All fellowship, by Climate Tracker and Hivos.

Of Energy Crisis, Beekeeping And Forest Conservation In Zimbabwe

Mutare, Zimbabwe — Growing up in Ngaone, Chipinge in the southeastern town of Zimbabwe, Ishmael Sithole (35) still recalls bees could not entertain anyone cutting down a tree near their hives.

He hated them for their stinging bite.

Then, he was a young boy, growing up in a family that grew wattle trees for survival.

He never imagined the idea of becoming a beekeeper someday, nor did he know the value of bees to conserving forests.

Only God knew his fate.

Sithole, is now a renowned professional beekeeper and commercial beekeeping consultant at MacJohnson Apiaries.

He works with Willett Mtisi (44) of Climate Smart Bees and Admire Munjuwanjuwa (35) of Honey World Zimbabwe.

Sithole nostalgic about his childhood and others determined to change the lives of their communities, the three have expanded the project to Dangamvura, a high-density suburb in Mutare—Zimbabwe’s fourth-largest city. 

Their project has become a shield to the effects of deforestation.

In this area, trees have been cut down except where these beekeepers’ beehives are located and surrounding areas.

“If you try to cut down these Acacia trees, bees will come out to defend their territory,” Sithole told Ubuntu Times while applying few puffs of smoke at one of the bee hive’s entrance.

Bees are highly sensitive to smell
Willett Mtisi, a professional beekeeper, prepares smoke which they use to prevent bees from biting them. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe / Ubuntu Times

“Bees have a high sense of smell. They naturally feel threatened whenever they hear the sound of an axe chopping a tree within a 10-meter radius. They become defensive and go into a stinging frenzy.”

When there is an intruder bees have a natural chemical that they produce known as pheromone, that triggers the colony to be defensive. 

Sithole, a member of the Southern African Development Community Apimondia Youth Initiative, said their bee sanctuary in Dangamvura, established two years ago, is serving a dual purpose-producing honey and keeping firewood poachers at bay.

Willet Mtisi dressed in bee suits
Willett Mtisi, a professional beekeeper, prepares to open a beehive at a sanctuary in Dangamvura. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe / Ubuntu Times

He adds that there is a symbiotic relationship between the urban environment and bees.

“This then offers an opportunity for biodiversity conservation as well as an opportunity for apitourism—where the public are afforded an opportunity to appreciate bees at sanctuary setting,” Sithole said.

The trio rescue bees in urban areas from ceilings, chimneys and tree hollows, and house them in the mountains. 

A queen bee is the mother of most bees in a colony
A female bee, known as the queen, surrounded by other bees. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe / Ubuntu Times

“We are currently hosting approximately 24,000 bees of the Apis Mellifera species in three standard Kenyan top bar hives. We will be introducing the trigona hives to attract the trigona species,” Sithole said.

At the sanctuary, they were mainly targeting to protect Acacia trees.

“Acacia trees are a lucrative source of nectar and pollen yet they offer immaculate shade for hives as well as a beautiful aesthetic appeal owing to their shape,” he said.

Sithole said they are determined to leave an indelible mark in the annals of the forest conservation to last hundreds of years to come.

“Since the tree of this year is Adansonia digitata (Baobab), we are busy erecting a nursery so that we plant hundreds of this largest succulent on the first Saturday of December (the National Tree Planting Day) as well as on the 11th of December (International Day of Mountains). Some of the trees we are nursing will be visible and alive 700 years to come,” he said.

Albert Sabawe (24), another beekeeper based in Chimanimani, about 144 kilometers out of Mutare, told Ubuntu Times that bees protect forests.

“No one dares to cut down a tree near my beehives,” he said.

Mtisi said honey which will be harvested at the bee sanctuary in Dangamvura will be an additional bonus.

“Honey builds bodily resistance to cough, colds and other ailments. Provides cure for constipation and it is used in Hospitals as a surgical dressing. Asthmatic patients also benefit from honey as well as people with ulcers,” she said.

Ishmael Sithole holding various bee honey products
Ishmael Sithole holding various bee honey products. In Zimbabwe, bee honey is used for medical purposes. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe / Ubuntu Times

Zimbabwe’s beekeeping industry has been growing for the past decade.

“As beekeepers, we champion forestry preservation by protecting our sites through establishing fireguards in areas where we keep our bees,” said Jacqueline Gowe, a chairperson at the Zimbabwe Apiculture Platform (ZAP).

“We promote use of modern hives made from timber of environmentally managed forests.”

According to the country situation paper, in 2014 there were over 150,000 beekeepers in the country but projections from the ZAP are that the number has almost doubled up.

The trio are expanding their project to other areas.

“We recently introduced another sanctuary close to Cecil Kop [a nature reserve located 2 kilometers out of Mutare] and we are prospecting for further expansions,” said Sithole.

Zimbabwe is experiencing its worst economic crisis in decades with shortages of basic commodities such as fuel and electricity.

Daily load shedding has become normal.

In urban areas, there is a huge demand for firewood used for cooking as prices of other sources of energy including liquified petroleum gas are beyond the reach of many.

This has forced many people to cut down trees indiscriminately.

People coming from the mountains to fetch firewood
In Chikanga, a high density suburb in Mutare, people walk everyday to the surrounding mountains to fetch firewood used for cooking. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe / Ubuntu Times

The southern African nation loses 330,000 hectares of forests per annum due to forest fires, settlements or agricultural expansion, firewood and tobacco farmers who burn their produce after harvests, according to the Forestry Commission.

But bee projects are helping to preserve forests and are fast becoming a lucrative enterprise.

Beekeeping industry has been growing for the past decade in Zimbabwe
Admire Munjuwanjuwa, a professional beekeeper, looks at some of the beehives in his custody. Credit: Farai Shawn Matiashe / Ubuntu Times

Violet Makoto, an information and communications manager at the Forestry Commission said beekeeping is a forests-based enterprise that is lucrative and conservative.

“We have also discovered that beekeeping is one of the strategies for forest conservation,” she said.

Makoto concluded that beekeeping is a non-consumptive way of utilizing forest resources.

Tanzania, Uganda Seal $3.5bn Crude Oil Pipeline Deal

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania — Uganda and Tanzania have signed a multibillion dollars deal that officially kicks off the construction of a 1,445km pipeline to transport crude oil from the landlocked country to the port city of Tanga on the Indian Ocean.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and his Tanzanian counterpart, John Magufuli on Sunday witnessed signing of the agreement to build what they claim as world’s longest oil pipeline stretching from the shores of lake Victoria to the Indian Ocean. The $3.5 billion pipeline, whose building starts in March 2021, is perceived as a milestone for the economies of the two countries.

Huge Crude Oil Treasure

Uganda discovered huge reserves of commercially viable crude oil in 2006. The landlocked country has approximately 6 billion barrels of oil and plans to bring some of it on stream by 2023-24 to vitalize its economy.

Speaking at the signing occasion President Museveni said citizens of Uganda and Tanzania will soon start to enjoy shared benefits of the crude oil resources.

“It’s good that we have now finalised the debate and negotiations about the discovered oil, the project has to take off with immediate effect to benefit people in both countries,” he said.

The move comes barely a week after the French energy giant—Total, a major investor in Uganda’s oil industry, struck a deal with Ugandan authorities by clearing administrative snags that were delaying implementation of the project.

“The conditions are set for the ramp-up of project activities and in particular, we will resume the land acquisition activities in Uganda while respecting the highest human rights standards,” Total Uganda said in a statement.

According to President Museveni, the investors will initially tap 6.5 billion barrels of crude oil, of which, 60 percent of the profit obtained will go to Tanzania and the remaining 40 percent will be for Uganda.

Displacement Of Communities

However, campaigners have raised eye brows on possible displacement of 12,000 families located along the corridor of the proposed pipeline and destruction of vital ecosystems in the vicinity.

Human rights activists say the multi-billion dollar investment could spell disaster for local people and trigger loss of land and livelihoods since it has it did not consider the concerns raised by thousands of farmers and pastoralists whose livelihoods will be at stake.

Campaigners said people fear that they would not receive a fair compensation urging the French energy giant and its partners to clear any obstacles on land valuation and compensation process.

Human Rights Concerns

A report on the Human Rights Impact Assessment; titled, ‘Empty Promises Down the Line: A human Rights Impact Assessment of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline’ published last week by Oxfam and other charities highlight several risks the project pose for communities located along the proposed pipeline corridor in Uganda and Tanzania.

Meanwhile Total welcomed some of the findings in the reports. “The project was designed with the overarching concern of minimizing and mitigating the impacts on local communities and in particular the need to relocate households,” the company said in a statement.

Salum Mnuna, Tanzania’s coordinator of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) said the company is on the verge of reaching similar agreement with Tanzania whose territory the pipeline will cross.

All Is Well

The company said it will consider the recommendations proposed in the report “Total welcomes and agrees with many of Oxfam’s suggestions and recommendations. Again, Total recognizes the value of the community-based approach taken to Oxfam in this assessment as it is complementary to the engagement and consultation with affected communities” the company said in a statement.

The company described the charity’s recommendations as “valuable and useful,” adding that it would take them as a basis to progress.

How Locals In Mauritius Are Spearheading The Cleanup Campaign After An Oil Spill

Mauritius — On a sunny day in Mahébourg southeast of Mauritius, an island nation in the Indian Ocean about 2,000 kilometers off the south-east coast of the African continent, Shaama Sandooyea (23) is making booms using nets and sugar cane straws. 

She is one of the several environmentalists and volunteers working round the clock to avert an environmental disaster–trapping oil before it reaches other coastal regions and lagoons in the Indian Ocean.

More than 1,000 tonnes of oil and diesel leaked from MV Wakashio, a Japanese vessel carrying about 4,000 tonnes of fuel, early August this year, near Pointe D’Esny after the ship had been in the reefs for 12 days. 

So far, affected areas include the waters of the blue lagoon outside the coastal village of Mahébourg – a filming area for many Bollywood movies, Riviere des Creoles, Bois des Amourettes, Vieux Grand Port, Anse Jonchée, Deux Frères and Quatre Soeurs. 

The Mauritian government led by the Prime Minister, Pravind Jugnauth has responded by declaring the disaster an environmental emergency.

But environmentalists say it has acted too late.

The placard translates to, 'Give value to fishers, skippers and people of the sea'
Environmental activist Shaama Sandooyea from the movement Future For Fridays Mauritius holds up a placard that translates to, ‘Give value to fishers, skippers and people of the sea.’ She is one of the activists who are protesting against government’s negligence in environmental disaster mitigation and preparedness. Credit: Shaama Sandooyea

“If the government had listened to (warnings) none of this would have happened. It was not an accident,” says Sandooyea, an environmental activist from the movement Future For Fridays Mauritius.

She says while doing the best to prevent the oil from causing further damage, those responsible should be held accountable.  

After catching wind of the news, she went to Mahébourg and “started helping to make booms,” she said.

Sandooyea is one of the thousands of locals that are helping Non-Governmental Organizations to contain the disaster.

International teams from France, South Africa, Russia, India, and Japan have also come to aid the government’s efforts.

This is a bad time for Mauritius and her people. 

The disaster has further burdened the nation that is battling the global pandemic, Coronavirus, which has claimed the lives of over 10 people while infecting more than 350, according to the World Health Organization.

COVID-19 imposed travel restrictions around the world, have impacted this island nation’s population of over 1.2 million people who rely heavily on tourism and fishing. 

The oil disaster could exacerbate Mauritius’s problems and result in huge impact on pristine lagoons, coral reefs, mangrove forests, and biodiversity.

People carrying booms to the Indian Ocean
Locals are using booms made of sugar cane straws and nets to trap oil from reaching other coastal regions. Credit: Mehryne Annooar

Stefan Gua, another local volunteer, says the problem requires collective effort. 

“We are mobilizing people into one movement so that we can take part in the clean-up campaign as a collective,” he said.

Piled booms before people take it to the Indian Ocean
Booms made of sugar cane and nets have proven to be effective in trapping oil from reaching other coastal regions in the affected area. Credit: Mehryne Annooar

Mehryne Annooar (22), a support educator trainee, told Ubuntu Times that she first heard of the oil spill news while she was in class but she had to do something.

“With the nature of my job I started volunteering during the weekend but I have had to go even during the week,” she said.

It is a desperate situation that calls for a lot of sacrifice.

Angora said she had to pull together all the resources available to contain the oil spill. 

“I had long hair. So, since hair is oleophobic, I had to cut it to make the booms,” she said.

Annooar said the booms made of sugar cane straws and nets have proven to be effective in blocking the oil from reaching the shore.

Ile Aux Aigrettes, an Islet off southeast of Mauritius, home to endangered endemic species of Mauritius protected by Mauritius Wildlife Foundation (MWF), a conservation charity, was affected by the toxic air from the oil spill and the animals had to be relocated to safer places.

The MWF reptile team has collected 30 Bojer’s skinks, six bouton skinks, and 30 lesser night-geckos from the various Islets and they are now being kept in a biosecure facility which had previously been built in 48 hours on the mainland, according to the MWF.

The oil spill is going to take a long time to clean
The area that has been affected by the leaked oil spans to about 5 to 6 kilometers. Credit: Sunil Dowarkasing

The southeast Islets are important habitats for these species which have gone extinct on mainland Mauritius and there are fears that the hydrocarbons may adversely affect these populations, putting 14 years of conservation work at stake.

While the extent of damage is yet to be established some species of fish are seen floating dead while some have been washed to the shores of the beaches and the mangroves’ roots are all covered in oil.

The disaster has destabilized the surrounding communities leading to the closure of schools and leaving many people hospitalized after inhaling toxic air.  

Volunteers have not been spared.

Annooar recounts the experience.

“The air is so toxic. It affected my health. I became sick,” she said.

Sandooyea was also affected by the toxic air. 

“I started feeling dizzy, nausea and skin irritation,” she said. 

People who clean up oil spills are at the risk of developing problems that include skin and eye irritation, neurologic and breathing problems, and stress, according to the United States Department of Health and Human Services.

A volunteer taking part in the clean up campaign
The toxic air in the beaches is already affecting people’s health with some feeling dizzy. Credit: Sunil Dowarkasing

This is the first human-made environmental disaster to hit Mauritius with such a huge impact. 

By the end of the first week of August about 400 sea booms had been deployed in the area. 

“We will take a lot of time to clean up this. The area that has been affected spans to about five to six kilometers,” Sunil Dowarkasing, a former global strategist, for Greenpeace International, a non-governmental environmental organization, told Ubuntu Times.

Meanwhile, Fridays For Future Mauritius has written a communique to Prime Minister Jugnauth pushing his administration to act responsibly in protecting the environment.

Despite the risk involved, volunteers and environmentalists such as Sandooyea have vowed to continue with the campaign to clean the oil spills no matter how long it will take. 

 

Kenya Wildlife’s plan to build a hotel in the Nairobi National Park attracts an uproar by conservationists and activists

In the past decades, the Nairobi National Park has not missed accompanying the word ‘encroachment’ in one sentence. This has always been the case of activists and environmentalists seeking to conserve the city’s jewel.

The Park is situated just across the city and is the only one in the world that shares a fence with a capital city, Nairobi. It is only five minutes away from the Nairobi Central Business District (CBD). But the tourist attraction that hosts a number of wildlife is now under threat by its own manager, the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS). The Service is planning to construct an eco-lodge and a high-end restaurant inside the park as a part of its 10-year management plan for the Park.

The Kenya Wildlife Service plans to set up buildings inside the Nairobi National Park, threatening its biodiversity.
A pride of lions take a walk inside the Nairobi National Park. Credit: Olga Levari Ercolano

The Park, which was set up by British colonialists in the 1940s is now under immense pressure from all development sectors including roads, railways, factories and lately, housing infrastructure. And just like many other countries in Africa, Kenya is now faced with very tough choices between development and conservation as it races against time to keep up with the fast-growing city population and be able to provide for it.

But, the development side has always rubbed shoulders with conservation activists the wrong way. In 2016, they contested the government’s decision to construct the standard gauge railway (SGR) that cuts across the Park.

Two years later in 2018, the Kenya Railways Corporation also constructed a 4-kilometer road connecting the Inland Container Depot (IDC) to the Southern Bypass that had also encroached the Park as it was constructed to divert motorists, especially heavy trucks from the city as they transport cargo from Mombasa towards western parts of the country and into neighboring Uganda. The road hived about 20-acres off the 28,860-acre park.

The Kenya Wildlife Service plans to set up buildings inside the Nairobi National Park, threatening its biodiversity.
A view of a section of the Southern Bypass in Nairobi that stretches along the park. Activists were opposed to its construction as it encroached on Park land. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

In its 10-year draft plan for the Nairobi National Park, the Kenya Wildlife Service is proposing a number of development projects inside the park.  Among these projects will be the fencing of the Park and also some construction that is set to take place, among which will be a high-end hotel inside the park.

This plan has caused an uproar among environmental activists, with some calling for proper stakeholder involvement in the plan, while others oppose the plan entirely. As a result, the Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife directed the Kenya Wildlife Service to give more time up to the end of June for the review of the plan.

“The public participation shall be extended for the public to raise their concerns or support, so that analyses and improvement of the plan can be undertaken for public interest,” read part of the Ministry’s press statement dated April 21.

The Kenya Wildlife Service plans to set up buildings inside the Nairobi National Park, threatening its biodiversity.
Zebras graze inside the Nairobi National Park, with sights of buildings in Nairobi city at the background. Credit: Reinhard Bonke

Brian Waswala, an environmental science lecturer at Maasai Mara University in southern Kenya says that the move will undermine conservation efforts.

“If I was a key decision-maker, I will not allow construction of the said hotel inside Nairobi National Park. My opinion is that making such a move will undermine the country’s efforts in the conservation of both Flora and Fauna. Kenya Wildlife Service role is to manage our animals and plants, and protect their territories from human interference,” he says.

However, environmentalists and activists in the country are expressing their concerns about the Park that they say has already been too encroached by human activities within the city. Initially, animals would freely move from the Mount Kenya region in central Kenya, through the Park and into the Mara Triangle in southern Kenya, all the way to Serengeti National Park in Tanzania. This is no longer the case as the city sprouted and the Park was fenced off, restricting movement of the animals.

The Kenya Wildlife Service plans to set up buildings inside the Nairobi National Park, threatening its biodiversity.
The Standard Gauge Railways (SGR) that was built by China in 2016 saw a number of people oppose it as it threatened the Park’s biodiversity. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

There have been human-animal conflicts as a result. Sometimes people in nearby estates in Nairobi wake up to roaming lions as they go to work in Nairobi. Recently, residents were scared by an African rock python in Langata estate that shares a fence with the Park.

If the management plan was to be implemented and the planned constructions inside the Park continue, this will set a bad precedent. Activists say that this will allow many other future leaders to follow suit and do the same if one of them was to go forward and interfere with the green spaces without being questioned.

Patricia Kombo, a Nairobi-based environmentalist and founder of PaTree Initiative says that constructions inside the Park would lead to the loss of natural habitat for some plant and animal species that are already facing threats and are endangered. “This will open up the Park for pollution, depletion of resources such as water and also to noise pollution. The Park has been battling with threats such as the SGR in 2016 where some acres were used to construct the railway line. Our parks are too precious to be lost and our animals need a safe and livable place,” she says.

The Kenya Wildlife Service plans to set up buildings inside the Nairobi National Park, threatening its biodiversity.
A section of the standard gauge railway as it enters the Nairobi National Park. Activists and environmentalists say that the railway has affected the normal life of the wildlife inside the park. Credit: Dominic Kirui / Ubuntu Times

There is also a need to have the park sustained for future generations and environmentalists say that this is a responsibility that all have for our children and their children.

“Ecological integrity is very important to the future. KWS should work hard to secure it, not frustrate it. The park having experienced brutal abuse does not need another beating. Wildlife territories should be as pristine as possible for future generations, for all to benefit from, not just a few,” Waswala says.

The Kenya Wildlife Service plans to set up buildings inside the Nairobi National Park, threatening its biodiversity.
Zebras and giraffes graze and browse on trees and shrubs inside the Nairobi National Park. Credit: Reinhard Bonke

Josphat Ngonyo, the CEO of Africa Network for Animal Welfare (ANAW) also says that every person has this responsibility with them. “We cannot afford to let Nairobi National Park go, that will be the worst mistake ever that we will not be forgiven by our children and children’s children,” he says.

Reinhard Bonke, an environmental and conservation activist and coordinator for the lobby group, Friend for Nairobi National Park (FoNNaP), says that the plan not only has a hotel to be constructed but several other infrastructures that will have a negative impact on the plant and animal life in the Park.

“We had a meeting with the Cabinet Secretary, and they gave us a plan and it was very clear that these guys were in the advanced stages of doing all the construction; they call it Upgrading Nairobi National Park. Some of the details presented to us which by then we were warned not to share out to the public in almost like a threat, they want to build an amphitheater, a high-end hotel, in the forest area, which is the black rhino breeding site; and you know NNP is the only highly endangered black rhino sanctuary in East and Central Africa. They also want to build the Director General’s house; I think a Ksh50 million house which will have a swimming pool and all that. They will also build a restaurant at hippo pool; there is a lot of heavy infrastructure,” Bonke explains.

The Kenya Wildlife Service plans to set up buildings inside the Nairobi National Park, threatening its biodiversity.
Giraffes browse on shrubs inside the Nairobi National Park. Credit: Reinhard Bonke

“Allowing the project to go ahead will not only damage the reputation of KWS but will also open a door to cartels finding a way to our parks (not only NNP) and by the end we will become unsustainable. The trend will go on everywhere and this is seen in some parks and reserves, where encroachment is rife. We need our parks, reserves to be as natural as possible unless we want to retain them as zoos which I believe will not serve the purpose that a National Park does,” Waswala concludes.

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