Economic Trees In Upper East Region Under Threat

Some economic trees in some parts of the Upper East Region are under serious threat as they are continuously being destroyed in the course of clearing land for agriculture activities.

Among the trees most affected are the shea and baobab trees in the Kassena-Nankana area and its environs, with the hardwood of the shea used for roofing and charcoal.

The trees are fast depleting and would soon become extinct if measures are not taken to safeguard the forest reserves.

This came to light at a stakeholders’ engagement forum on Baobab and Shea Destruction held at Paga in the Kassena-Nankana West District of the Upper East Region.

The forum, which was organised by the Kassena-Nankana Baobab Women Cooperative Union and facilitated by the Organisation for Indigenous Initiatives and Sustainability Ghana (ORGIIS-Ghana) was sponsored by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) under its Farm Forest Facility Programme.

It brought together traditional rulers, Assembly members, technocrats, opinion leaders, security agencies, the media from the Kassena-Nankana Municipal and the Kassena-Nankana West District.

Women groups that are into baobab and the shea nut picking and processing were also in attendance.

The stakeholders lamented that apart from the farming activities that lead to the destruction of the economic trees, the farmers also cut down the same trees for charcoal production.

Speaking to the stakeholders, Mr Julius Awaregya, the Director of ORGIIS-Ghana, said this year, Nakong, one of the communities in the Kassena-Nankana West District lost 55 hectares of Shea parkland whilst Gia in the Kassena Nankana Municipal lost over 100 acres of Shea population due to Burkina Faso’s Settler farmers.

“Every year, we lose thousands of Shea trees in Pindaa area due to charcoal and fuelwood harvesters. This year, some people in Kayoro have gone back to timber business which is not sustainable, they cut the wood and transport it through Kajelo and Gia to Paga and Navrongo markets to sell.

“They also send the wood to Chiana and Kayoro markets to sell, while some is used by the local people to roof their buildings. I am not against the local people using the resources to build their houses, but since the trees are not replaced, it will not leave anything for our future generation tomorrow,” he warned.