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Tree Plantation in Pakistan

Pakistan to use satellite for monitoring Billion Tree Tsunami Project


The Ministry of Climate Change has decided to monitor the government's Billion Tree Tsunami Project via satellite. In this regard, a memorandum of understanding (MoU) has been signed between the Ministry of Climate Change and the Pakistan Space & Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO).

As reported by sources, the Special Assistant to the Prime Minister for Climate Change Malik Amin Aslam said that SUPARCO would also ensure the transparency of the project.

Prime Minister Imran Khan's initiative to plant 10 billion trees to make Pakistan greener and mitigate the effects of climate change has been lauded by different countries.




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Islamabad to get 23 Miyawaki urban forests: Zartaj

Minister of State for Climate Change Zartaj Gul said the Ministry of Climate Change would establish 23 Miyawaki urban forests across the federal capital which would help enhance the green cover of the metropolis.

Minister of State extended her gratitude to the Australian High Commissioner Dr. Geoffrey Shaw for donating a Miyawaki forest of 1,200 trees being established at the F-9 Park here while jointly inaugurating the plantation with the Ambassador


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Thousands of saplings (different species) have been planted on the main GT Road between Peshawar and Nowshera.




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During the spring tree planting season, 2021, fruit plants in the Kalash Valley Bumburate were distributed to local communities with the aim to increase covering the forest and improving the local economy.
#Plantsforpakistan
Mar 2, 2021




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On Pakistan’s Indus Delta, women forest rangers guard world's largest arid mangrove forest


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A female forest worker poses with the signboard of a mangrove nursery established by WWF-Pakistan in Mero Dablo village in Thatta, Pakistan, on March 09, 2021. (AN photo by Zulfiqar Kunbhar)



ZULFIQAR KUNBHAR
March 18, 2021


  • 250 women called eco-guards have been trained by Sindh Forest Department and WWF to be part of a mangrove plantation program
  • The women, along with their families, plant new trees and also guard them against threats from animals and illegal logging

THATTA: For decades, grazing animals and loggers destroyed thousands of trees on Pakistan’s Indus River Delta, home to the largest arid mangrove forests in the world.
The Indus Delta has around 95 percent of the total mangrove forest cover of Pakistan and was once home to eight species of mangroves, which the Sindh Forest Department (SFD) says forest destruction reduced to half.

By 2005, mangrove cover had declined to 84,000 hectares — the lowest recorded level — from 260,000 hectares in the eighties.

In 2019, as part of an ongoing campaign to improve forest cover, the Sindh Forest Department (SFD) collaborated with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) to set up a mangrove nursery, hiring 250 women not just to plant new trees but also to guard them against threats from animals and humans.

Hired along with their families, the women, officially called eco-guards, played a “vital role in the protection of mangroves, which is a family unit job,” Riaz Ahmed Wagan, SFD’s chief conservator of mangroves, told Arab News.

Assessments by SFD showed that mangrove cover had increased once more to 210,000 hectares by 2020.

The women eco-guards, Wagan said, had a large role to play in the improving numbers.


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60-year-old forest worker Hawa Dablo poses at a mangrove nursery established by WWF-Pakistan in Mero Dablo village in Thatta, Pakistan, on March 09, 2021. (AN photo by Zulfiqar Kunbhar)

One of them, 60-year-old Hawa Dablo from Mero Dablo, a fishing village on the edge of the Arabian Sea, said she spent her days planting seeds, looking after saplings and standing guard, with other members of her family, against the trees being destroyed by roaming animals.

“I have been working here for the last two years since this [mangrove] nursery was established in my village,” Dablo told Arab News.She said the most vulnerable trees were young mangroves that had to be protected from grazing camels and buffaloes as well as from local loggers.

“In order to preserve mangroves, locals start initiatives from their own households and at the personal level,” Dablo said. “Every household or village will ensure that their animals are released for open grazing in only those areas where there are mature mangroves; locals will make sure that animals will not touch the areas where new plantations have been done.”
But she said illegal logging still remained a threat, although it was no longer rampant.

“In case any mangrove cutting activity comes under our notice we inform our male family members to take further action,” Dablo said. “In case there is deliberate cutting of mangroves, mostly by outsiders, we complain to local Sindh Forest Department officials through our male partners.”

Dr. Tahir Rasheed, the regional head for the Sindh and Balochistan wing of WWF-Pakistan, said that under the mangrove protection program, the women rangers were paid a small stipend and given incentives “including sewing machines to do stitch and embroidery work; ice boxes and ponds for fish keeping etcetera to improve livelihood.”

The incentives, he said, were important in an area where it is estimated that nearly 90 percent of the population lives below the poverty line.

Most households on the delta rely on fishing, and preserving mangroves was key to maintaining the marine ecosystem, another woman eco-guard explained, given that a wide variety of fish laid their eggs in mangrove bushes on the delta.

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Fishermen making fishing nets at Khariyoon Takur, an island village located near the Indus Delta in Thatta, Pakistan, on March 09, 2021. (AN photo by Zulfiqar Kunbhar)

“We guard mangroves and don’t allow people to cut green mangroves,” said Razia Dablo from the island fishing village of Khariyoon Takur. “If there will be no more green mangroves, it will destroy the ecosystem of fish; that will directly negatively affect our livelihood.”

Besides employing the eco-guards, the Sindh Forest Department has given full-and part-time “green jobs” to over 50,000 people since 2000 — around 40% of them women.


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A view of a mangrove plantation on the Indus Delta’s Hajamro Creek in Thatta, Pakistan, on March 09, 2021. (Photo by Saeed ul Islam, Manager Mangroves Program, WWF-Pakistan)


“Despite social restrictions that put limitations on work on women outside their homes, women participation in afforestation at Indus Delta is almost half of the total forestation workforce, which is a great achievement,” SFD’s Wagan said. “For upcoming plantation projects on the Indus Delta and elsewhere, we are planning to achieve maximum women participation.”




 
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Planting Tree in Islamabad is one thing
Real Challenge is increase tree footprint in Sindh and Balochistan Provinces

Large area of Sind can be made greener in short term

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Planting Tree in Islamabad is one thing
Real Challenge is increase tree footprint in Sindh and Balochistan Provinces

Large area of Sind can be made greener in short term

View attachment 725875

For that we are going to need more extensive canal network supplied by more reservoirs. Along side the proper maintain with and management of the current canals and dams, and how much average water is used by each acre of farm land.
 
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Mangroves Plantation Campaign

Pakistan Navy has launched Mangroves Plantation Campaign in the Coastal Areas of Sindh and Balochistan provinces. Commander Coast, Vice Admiral Zahid Ilyas graced the occasion as Chief Guest and inaugurated Pakistan Navy Mangroves Plantation Campaign 2021 by planting mangrove sapling at Port Bin Qasim AOR.

Mangroves are vital to coastal ecosystem, prevention of sea intrusion and sustainment of marine life. Being a major stakeholder of the maritime domain and realizing the importance of mangroves for marine life,

Pakistan Navy has taken a major initiative to revive mangrove forests all along the coast. Realizing the importance of mangroves forests in combating pollution, countering coastal erosion and providing a number of economic and financial opportunities to coastal communities, Mangroves Plantation Campaign is part of PN environmental protection program under which Pakistan Navy has planted 07 million mangroves from Shah Bandar to Jiwani with the collaboration of International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Sindh and Balochistan Forest departments.

On this occasion, Chief of the Naval Staff in his message highlighted the challenges of sustainability and existence mangroves forests are facing. He emphasized that covered area of mangroves forests has decreased significantly over the period due various factors such as reduction in fresh water supply, marine pollution, coastal erosion, mangroves cutting etc.

Therefore, requirement of new plantation as well as preservation/ protection of existing mangroves forests needs to be undertaken. Naval Chief in his message underscored the significance of PN Mangroves Plantation Campaign to achieve the goal of developing ‘Green Coastal Belt’.

He urged that the plantation campaign will have wide reaching and positive outcomes through sustainable efforts. Improving the health of the environment will ultimately contribute to reducing the risk of local and national disasters through better flood management and protection, sustainable livelihood, ensuring food security, impacts of climate change and raising sea levels.

Due to COVID-19 pandemic, the mangrove plantation ceremony was attended by limited number of officials from Sindh and Balochistan Forest Departments and reps of IUCN.



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