Mauritania plants trees to hold back desert
Reporting by Laura Martel; writing by David Lewis; Editing by Alison Williams
Sat Aug 21, 2010 11:11am EDT
NOUAKCHOTT (Reuters) – Mauritania has launched a tree-planting program aimed at protecting its capital from the advancing desert and coastal erosion, a project that could eventually extend thousands of kilometers across Africa. President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz on Saturday planted the first of some 2 million trees that are meant to form a “green belt” around the capital, Nouakchott, and curb erosion elsewhere in the desert nation that straddles black and Arab Africa. “The aim of this green belt is to stop the advancing desert and stop encroachment by the sea, which is threatening the town with floods,” Ba Housseynou Hammadi, minister for the environment and sustainable development, said. … The project is part of a broader anti-desertification plan, the “Great Green Wall,” launched by the African Union in 2005 to try to create a 15 km-wide wall of greenery stretching 7,000 km between Africa’s east and west coasts. The plan is to plant a number of desert-resistant species of tree across 11 nations in Africa’s Sahel region, to the south of the Sahara, to ease erosion and improve the quality of the soil for farmers in a region prone to drought and food shortages. African leaders met in June to try to seek progress for the idea, but it has so far failed to take off due to a lack of funding and some skepticism over how effective it would be and whether the trees would be looked after.