The Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources in collaboration with the Forestry Commission and other stakeholders will celebrate the International Day of Forests on March 21.
It is a day set aside by the United Nations (UN) to raise awareness on the importance of all types of forest and trees outside forest zones.
The global theme for the celebration of the International Day of Forests 2020 is: “Forests and Biodiversity”.
The UN, however, allows member states to adopt the date of the celebration of the International Day of Forests to suit their particular circumstances. In this direction, Ghana uses the month of May annually for the celebration of the Day to coincide with the major rainy and planting season.
A statement issued by Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie, Chief Executive Forestry Commission, said this year’s celebration, the ninth since inception, will be observed from May 11 – 15, 2020.
Ghana has also carved a theme out of the global one to suit its peculiar circumstances, which is “Protect Forests and Biodiversity for Human Survival”.
The theme was chosen because the country’s forests are under various forms of threats, such as illegal farming, logging, lumbering, wildfires, overgrazing, fuelwood extraction, illegal mining despite the numerous benefits that are obtained from the forests.
“Forest is the repository of biodiversity, so any threat to the forest is a threat to biodiversity. Thus, a threat to the plethora of life forms found in forests – micro-organisms, animals, plants, food and shelter to animals and insects that constitute the biodiversity. There is, therefore, the urgent need for all to get involved in protecting the forest and their biodiversity components,” the statement said.
Forest biological diversity is a broad term that refers to all life forms found within forested areas and the ecological roles they perform. As such, forest biological diversity encompasses not just trees, but the multitude of plants, animals and micro-organisms that inhabit forest areas and their associated genetic diversity.
Forest biological diversity is considered at different levels, including the ecosystem, landscapes, species, populations and genetics. Complex interactions occur within and amongst these levels. In biologically diverse forests, this complexity allows organisms to adapt to continually changing environmental conditions and to maintain ecosystem functions.
The statement said the choice of the theme for the celebration is meant to provide the opportunity to educate the general public on the tremendous potentials of biodiversity in forests toward the sustainability of our lives and the economy in general.
“Educating the general populace is one of the ways through which we can restore the nation’s depleted forests,” it said. This involves awareness creation, sensitisation and behavioural change approaches to forest protection, development and participatory planning and management.
The Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources in collaboration with the Forestry Commission and other stakeholders will engage in massive education programmes targeting the youth of the country and policymakers on the need to protect and conserve forests.
This collaboration will be extended to schools, communities, farmers groups, youth organisations, CSOs / NGOs and others to educate the public on the need to protect forests and biodiversity, using the various media platforms.
There will also be tree planting exercises in all regions and districts throughout the country to commemorate the event and draw the attention of the public to the indispensable role forests and their inherent biodiversity play in human lives.