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I.Coast launches major drive to reverse deforestation by AFP Staff Writers Abidjan (AFP) Nov 24, 2022 Ivory Coast, which has lost nearly all its forests in the last half century, has launched a major project to triple its cover by 2030, the government announced Thursday. The Forests Investment Project aims to cover 6.5 million hectares (16 million acres) -- or 20 percent of the country -- said the World Bank, which is financing the 143-million-euro ($149 million) scheme. The project would also help preserve 300,000 hectares of forest-land classed as degraded in the southwest, as well as forests in the northern Savanes zone, said Waters and Forests Minister Laurent Tchagba. The seven-year project will benefit the country's four national parks, including the Tai Forest National Park in the west of the country, classed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. It is one of the last remnants of the primary tropical forest of West Africa. Delegations from other cocoa-producing countries Brazil, Colombia, Ghana and the Dominican Republic all attended the launch of the project. Ivory Coast had 16 million hectares of forest in the 1960s. That figure has fallen to two million hectares, according to official figures, mainly because of the development of cocoa plantations, of which Ivory Coast is the world's main producer, with 40 percent of the market. Climate change, natural disasters, soil degradation and population movement also contribute to the loss of forest.
No longer evergreen: Germany eyes diversity to save forests Beelitz, Germany (AFP) Nov 17, 2022 Once a sea of green, thousands of spruces with brown crowns and charred trunks now stand in a forest in eastern Germany, testament to one of the most ferocious forest fires to have ravaged the region in years. Germany recorded its worst bout of forest fires in 2022, and experts believe such calamities will only intensify in the coming years because of climate change. Foresters are now racing to make the woods more resilient, including by giving Germany's forests - known for its acres of evergre ... read more
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