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Tree Plantation in Pakistan

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Engro Foundation, the social investment arm of Engro Corporation, has signed a Letter of Understanding with the Ministry of Climate Change, Govt of Pakistan and World Wildlife Fund (WWF-Pakistan ) to develop a forest restoration and carbon offset program, in line with the Group’s sustainability agenda.

The forest restoration and carbon offset program will be implemented over a 10-year period with an estimated cost of approximately PKR 600 million, with the goal of planting and protecting 50,000 acres of forest area across Pakistan.

Continuing its path to become a more sustainable organization, Engro has recently become the first company from Pakistan to sign a commitment, sponsored by World Economic Forum’s (WEF) International Business Council, to adopt and implement stakeholder capitalism metrics. Further, Engro Polymer & Chemicals – a subsidiary of Engro Corporation – is also implementing a comprehensive circular economy program and has become the first affiliate member from Pakistan to join the WEF Global Plastic Action Partnership (GPAP).
 
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Chitral Forest Division's "Throw, Sow & Grow" initiative for restoration of dry temperate forests .....
1 Million Seed-balls of chilghoza, deodars & local indigenous species of economic, social & ecological value, while involving locals...
Kalash valley, Shishi..

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Free wild, fruit plants distributed to the locals in Kalash Valley, Chitral..​

The Kalash women and children were given around 4500 fruit plants and wild plants.

By Sameer Tahir .

Free wild, fruit plants distributed to the locals in Kalash Valley, Chitral



Thousands of plants of various types were given among the local inhabitants at Kalash Valley Bumburate in order to increase forest cover and offer new livelihood alternatives in Chilghoza Landscape in the Chitral range.

The Kalash women and children were given around 4500 fruit plants as well as wild plants.

The plants were distributed at a ceremony at Bumborat, with Divisional Forest Officer Chitral Farhad Ali as the principal guest.

On the occasion, Ejaz Ahmed, Provincial Coordinator of the GEF Chilghoza Project, Ziaur Rehman, Value Chain Development Specialist, and Shahzad Ahmad, Deputy Forest Manager of Chitral, were also present.

Ejaz Ahmed, speaking at the event, said that the distribution of fruit plants was part of a GEF-funded project called "Reversing Deforestation and Degradation in High Conservation Value Chilgoza Pine Forests in Pakistan," which was carried out by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) in collaboration with the Ministry of Climate Change and the Forest Department of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The initiatives aim to improve local livelihoods by increasing productivity and improving the services and functions of Pakistan's Chilghoza forests.

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Through the active participation of local communities, the project brings roughly 30,000 hectares of Chilghoza woods under sustainable forest management. 3600 hectares will be used for Assisted Natural Regeneration, while 800 hectares will be used for agro-forestry and farm forestry.
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Free wild, fruit plants distributed to the locals in Kalash Valley, Chitral..​

The Kalash women and children were given around 4500 fruit plants and wild plants.

By Sameer Tahir .

Free wild, fruit plants distributed to the locals in Kalash Valley, Chitral



Thousands of plants of various types were given among the local inhabitants at Kalash Valley Bumburate in order to increase forest cover and offer new livelihood alternatives in Chilghoza Landscape in the Chitral range.

The Kalash women and children were given around 4500 fruit plants as well as wild plants.

The plants were distributed at a ceremony at Bumborat, with Divisional Forest Officer Chitral Farhad Ali as the principal guest.

On the occasion, Ejaz Ahmed, Provincial Coordinator of the GEF Chilghoza Project, Ziaur Rehman, Value Chain Development Specialist, and Shahzad Ahmad, Deputy Forest Manager of Chitral, were also present.

Ejaz Ahmed, speaking at the event, said that the distribution of fruit plants was part of a GEF-funded project called "Reversing Deforestation and Degradation in High Conservation Value Chilgoza Pine Forests in Pakistan," which was carried out by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) in collaboration with the Ministry of Climate Change and the Forest Department of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The initiatives aim to improve local livelihoods by increasing productivity and improving the services and functions of Pakistan's Chilghoza forests.

chalghoza_537e.jpg


Through the active participation of local communities, the project brings roughly 30,000 hectares of Chilghoza woods under sustainable forest management. 3600 hectares will be used for Assisted Natural Regeneration, while 800 hectares will be used for agro-forestry and farm forestry.
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Soon to be rolled back and deforested with the return of the Nooras and Peeplays
 
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Trees Provide Income and Preserve Land in Pakistan​


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    Under the ADB-funded Sustainable Livelihood in Barani Areas Project, farmers in Punjab province are growing trees, such as eucalyptus, as a cash crop on rain-fed lands. Photo: Mohammad Ismail Khan/ ADB.

A sustainable livelihood project in Pakistan is boosting poor farmers' income and protecting their land from erosion.

In Rahdari village in Punjab's Khushab district, farmers have taken up growing trees as a cash crop on barani, or rain-fed lands, where yields were often uncertain and usually poor.

"It's like a bank account but with a difference," says a beaming Ramzan, 36, referring to the trees he planted 5 years ago on half a hectare of land. "You water the trees and see them grow every day. And when you need the cash, you cut the tree and sell the wood."

"A friend of mine has bought a car by selling wood and now earns money from the car by using it as a taxi," added Ramzan. "Many other families that I know are now able to send their children to school thanks to the additional income provided by the trees."

This was not always the case. Parts of Punjab, Pakistan's most populous province, suffer frequent droughts and low crop yields. Not long ago, the Khushab district was a barren land threatened by the advancing desert where wood was a rare commodity. An ADB project, however, has been literally planting seeds of change in the area. The results are now plain for all to see.

Changing the barani landscape​


Loss of productive land to water and wind erosion often threatened the food security of villagers in Punjab. Widespread loss of shrub and vegetation in the sandy pastures also made livestock production challenging.

Against such a dismal backdrop, an ADB project presented a community-based development model, involving the communities and government and non-government organizations as implementers. The goal of the Sustainable Livelihood in Barani Areas Project was to raise the quality of life of the poorest and most vulnerable families in the targeted areas.


"Now every family sets aside a piece of land for planting trees. This practice not only stabilizes the sand dunes, but also gives them cash and food security."
- Ghulam Rasool, regional manager of the National Rural Support Program


"The first time I came here to meet the communities was about 5 years ago. I was astonished to see the barren land except for some bushes and old trees, locally called kagali, here and there. It was like a treeless plateau that came to life once a year when and if it rained," says Ghulam Rasool, regional manager of the National Rural Support Program. Rasool is from the Hunza region in the northern most part of Pakistan, an equally dry but mountainous region where communities religiously plant and protect trees as life-nourishing assets.

"But now every family sets aside a piece of land for planting trees. This practice not only stabilizes the sand dunes, but also gives them cash and food security," he says, pointing to the rows of eucalyptus across the rolling sand dunes.

Villagers along the Chenab-Jhelum link canal in Noorpur Thal, Khushab district benefited in particular from planting eucalyptus. Ground water level had risen after the canal was built about a decade ago in the sandy region. Eucalyptus, a fast-growing and water-consuming plant, helped keep the water table down for over 26,000 farmers in waterlogged areas. The farmers planted saplings on more than 2,000 hectares of sandy fields and shelter beds.

"Planting trees on 1 acre saved 5 acres of land (about 2 hectares). Besides, the income these plants are providing are vital for me and my family," says 82-year-old farmer Allah Yar, who is now sick and unable to work in the fields. His son sold some trees for 29 thousand rupees to buy medicine for Yar and other needs of the family.

The plantations have increased fodder supply for cattle. Many villagers also use the wood as fuel for heating in winter and for cooking purposes. Following the project's success, villagers planted more than 1,000 hectares with their own resources in the Noorpur Thal area alone. Many of these have been leased to the matchstick and pulp industry as captive plantations.
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10-year strategy developed to reduce desertification, forest degradation in KP

Bureau Report
April 9, 2022

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa forestry, environment and wildlife department has prepared a strategy to reduce desertification and forest degradation at the cost of over Rs2.15 billion in the next 10 years.

Soon after coming to power in the province 2013, the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) had launched the Billion Trees Tsunami Afforestation Programme in the province.

The initiative was later extended to other parts of the country as the Ten Billion Trees Tsunami Afforestation programme after the party formed government in the centre in 2018.

The strategy, whose draft is available with Dawn and is called the Reducing Emission from Desertification and forest Degradation (REDD+) Action Plan, is part of the Pakistan National REDD+ Strategy, which was approved in 2021.

Govt’s Rs2.15bn initiative to involve multi-stakeholder participatory approach


The KP Provincial REDD+ Action Plan (Prap) has been developed to contribute to the strategy’s objectives and sustainable management of forest resources.

According to the Prap, starting in the early 2000s, KP has been a pioneer in introducing participatory forest management and successfully formalising the approach in its legal frameworks, and because of this history, KP naturally takes a community-based approach to REDD+.

“KP’s REDD+ Action Plan is founded on this history of community-based approaches to resource management.”

The document said the preparation of KP Prap took a multi-stakeholder participatory approach.

“The overarching purpose of the Prap is to increase benefits from sustainably managed and enhanced forest resources for the people contributing to their livelihood and at the same time mitigating climate change,” it said.

On the other documents has outlined specific objectives including outlining actions in line with ground realities to address the prioritised drivers and barriers with the context of specific actions and related budget, improving health of the forest ecosystems by reducing deforestation and forest degradation and enhancements of biomass and defining effective implementation and monitoring of REDD+ actions to address the drivers.

Also, the strategy will focus on identifying social and environmental risks associated with proposed actions and suggest risk mitigation.

The document identified the clearing of forestland for agriculture, and housing colonies and settlement as the main drivers of deforestation. Also, high demand for energy, construction timber and grazing and illegal timber extraction for selling for construction and firewood and improperly managed tourism activities have been identified as drivers of forest degradation in the province.

“These drivers were analysed by the stakeholders and several underlying causes were identified,” it said.

The document said the Prap proposed several actions to address underlying causes of deforestation and degradation and one of them was achieving the efficiency and alternative sources of energy to address the main cause of degradation, which was firewood extraction for energy.

Also, mapping resources and effective implementation of regulation to curb conversion of land to other land uses are other priority areas identified in the Prap.

According to the documents, the strategy, to address the issue of deforestation, has suggested to improve forest resources include improving enabling policy environment for REDD+ implementation which include participatory monitoring system, benefit sharing mechanism, forest law enforcement and implementation strengthened, capacity building of actors on forest monitoring system besides introducing alternative incomes and livelihood opportunities, promoting sustainable forest-based enterprises and vocational education, and forest-based payments from forest ecosystem services.

It also proposed a set of interlinked activities that form coherent actions for counteracting a driver of deforestation, forest degradation and/ or barriers to expansion of a forest carbon enhancement activity.

“One of the key actions identified in the Prap is continuation and refining participatory approach to forest management in which the province has already travelled a long way,” the draft strategy said. Also, integration of trees on private lands (as in case of BTAP) has been emphasised to promote sustainable solutions to energy demands on forests.

The document also said the Prap would make traction through participatory forest management plans with an approach that encouraged harvesting trees on a rotational basis so that timber and fuel might be produced and used sustainably for local use.

The Prap suggested activities to enhance forest stocks to ensure that forests continue to see improvement for effective REDD+ results.

Published in Dawn, April 9th, 2022
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Every thing is being reversed can we please reverse this billion tree tsunami thing. We need more grey then green.
 
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I was thinking about this today. How Khan was the driving factor to improve the environment and how Pakistan is facing dire consequences of climate change.
Will all this end now with his departure 😔
Yes, Punjab will be effective. KPK will have no effect..
Sindh is already out of bound per 18 amendment....
 
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