WFP launches tree project to bear fruit for poor and environment in Tajikistan

DUSHANBE, April 8, 2010, Asia-Plus  — In a unique climate-change project, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) has launched Tajikistan’s largest tree-planting initiative by an international agency.  As well providing a future source of food for the hungry poor, the project allows WFP to offset some of its carbon, press release issued by WFP on […]

Nargis Hamrobboyeva

DUSHANBE, April 8, 2010, Asia-Plus  — In a unique climate-change project, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) has launched Tajikistan’s largest tree-planting initiative by an international agency.  As well providing a future source of food for the hungry poor, the project allows WFP to offset some of its carbon, press release issued by WFP on April 7 said.

In western Tajikistan, in a series of villages along the border with Uzbekistan, WFP has given 800 vulnerable families 40 trees apiece – apricot, pomegranate, cherry, mulberry, almond, pistachio and pine. These families will also get WFP food while they receive training in looking after the trees.  In three years, when the trees become productive, the families will have ample supplies of fruit for the first time in their lives with enough left over to sell at the market.

Some 63,000 fruit, nut and pine trees are currently taking root in Tajikistan thanks to U.S. $100,000 provided by WFP”s vehicle-leasing department in Dubai.  The idea — the first such initiative in WFP — is to offset the carbon footprint of the vehicles used in WFP food assistance operations by planting trees which will have environmental as well as economic benefits.

The trees have been planted in two food-insecure areas of Tajikistan: the west and in the eastern Rasht Valley.  In the east, WFP is partnering with UNICEF in 50 secondary schools in a learning and environmental awareness program. Some 10,000 secondary students have been given one tree each – either apricot, apple or poplar – which is marked with a plaque bearing their name.  The boys and girls are responsible for making the tree grow, and in doing so, they learn about the role of trees in preventing soil erosion.

Important collaboration on this project came from the Tajikistan Forestry Agency, which designated staff to train the beneficiaries, provided technical assistance from maps and reports going back some 50 years, dedicated a forest ranger to patrol the pistachio seedlings on horseback, and signed a 20-year land lease with the new tree-owners, charging them just US$1 a year.

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