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National Agency for Reforestation and the Great Green Wall

Dates to rehabilitate Senegal’s forest cover

In Senegal, the National Agency for Reforestation and the Great Green Wall has just launched an operation to collect date pits to restore Senegal's forest cover, as the country is losing 40,000 hectares of forest per year. Therefore, the National Agency for Reforestation and the Great Green Wall is stepping up initiatives to restore degraded land. The agency’s latest initiative aims to plant thousands of trees in the West African country.

In a 2018 report, the World Bank said Senegal had 81,480 km2 of forest cover. But 40,000 hectares of forest are lost every year due to human activity. The most affected areas are located in the Ferlo, in the east of Senegal, in the Sine Saloum in the west and in Casamance in the south.

To hope to restore the forest cover, ASERGMV plans to use date pits. “Date palms grow well in the whole Ferlo area, because they are very humid. These trees are also very interesting for biodiversity because of their water retention capacity, which allows them to survive during the dry season,” explains Haïdar el-Ali, the director of the National Agency for Reforestation and the Great Green Wall.

The planting of date palms will also reduce imports of dates, which are widely consumed during the Ramadan period. These fruits, very often candied, come from Tunisia, the world’s leading exporter, with 120,000 tonnes of dates sold on the international market during the 2018-2019 campaign.

Source: afrik21.africa


Photo source: Dreamstime.com

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