Campaign to plant trees underway

25 Nov, 2022 - 00:11 0 Views
Campaign to plant trees underway Some of the trees recently cut down along Fife Avenue. —- Picture- Capitalk100.4FM

Suburban

TREES for Harare and other nature lovers in the capital are on a campaign to get residents of the capital and the rest of the citizens in Zimbabwe to plant trees during this year’s National Tree Planting Day on December 3.

Suburban Reporter

“This National Tree Planting Day Saturday 3 December from 6am to 1pm, buy a tree. Local nurseries will be selling trees and giving free advice to promote tree planting across Zimbabwe,” reads a pamphlet being distributed by Trees for Harare.

Hillside Park is also making plans for the National Tree Planting Day with tree planting expected to take place between 8am and 12midday. A fundraising will also be held where residents can come through and buy trees for US$10 or ZWL$8 000 per tree to plant in the park. Money raised from the tree sales will be used for the Hillside Nursery’s tree planting programme. 

“On this year’s National Tree Planting Day please join us with your family and plant a tree for our future generations and the community. Trees cost US$10 or ZWL$8 000 — this includes the hole dug, a tree in a sleeve, watering and care for the first two years. Trees must be pre-purchased in order to plan accordingly. Funds raised from the tree planting will go towards purchasing many thousands of pockets for the Hillside Nursery’s tree planting programme,” Hillside Park said in a statement.

Fishing and braai stands will be offer and money raised these activities will go towards the general upkeep and improvements in the ponds area. 

“Food and beverages will be available to purchase on the day. Bring all the family. To donate trees please send Ecocash to Vivienne on 0772907758 with a follow up on WhatsApp message. For any further enquiries contact Iain on 0787394881.”

Hillside Park was started in 1957 and is approximately 30 hectares. Its main features are five big concrete ponds. The whole park lay derelict until Iain Jarvis started working on the ponds and along with the community and council they have reshaped the area in the last two years. In partnership with the City of Harare and the Hillside Park Association they are now working on restoring the park to its former glory for the benefit of the community.

This year’s National Tree Planting Day comes on the backdrop of massive cutting down of trees in Harare, which has irked residents of the city. 

In September, residents expressed dismay over the wanton cutting of trees in the city’s suburbs and along the streets saying the action was insensitive to the environment.

A number of residents reported that trees were being cut in their neighbourhoods with some saying workers from power utility ZESA Holdings were the ones cutting trees in their residential areas. 

But residents said the ZESA workers were cutting even trees that were not disturbing power lines raising the ire of residents given the importance of trees to the environment. 

According to residents, the other tree cutters, believed to have been from the City of Harare, were telling them that they were cutting them in order for cars to pass safely. 

In some instances, the tree cutters were telling residents that they were not being paid adequately and have to cut the trees to sell firewood to supplement their incomes. Some of the Jacaranda trees along Central Avenue on the edge of the central business district were also victim to the ongoing cutting of trees.

Residents said the City of Harare workers always cut the trees when they were about to flower but had no policy of replanting trees to replace the ones being brought down. The residents said along Borrowdale Road (which has been renamed Liberation Legacy Way), trees were being cut down to put up ugly looking advertising billboards. 

Recently Trees for Harare took the Borrowdale Office Park to task after it was reported that they had cut down all their fever trees. 

“The world is trying to protect every living tree right now to curb greenhouse emissions,” said Trees For Harare. 

Trees for Harare was formed after concern shown from Harare residents about the amount of trees being cut in and around Harare. The volunteers now go around Harare working with the City of Harare and the Forestry Commission identifying areas to plant and then hold planting days. 

Some of the trees cut down this week are said to be 50-year-old trees and residents wondered why public utilities were being so insensitive to the environment.

In 2019, there was an outcry among residents and nature lovers following the cutting down of more than three dozen trees in Greendale, which were reportedly cut because they were disturbing Zesa power lines.

Then residents said about 44 trees were cut down near Courtney Selous Primary School in Greendale.

A new study led by Boston University School of Public Health researchers and published in the journal Frontiers in Public Health recently found that increasing green vegetation in large, metropolitan areas could have prevented between 34,000-38,000 deaths, based on data from 2000-2019, according to www.sciencedaily.com. 

The nationwide study also showed that overall greenness in metro areas has increased in the past 20 years, by nearly 3 percent between 2000-2010 and 11 percent between 2010-2019.

The study builds upon well-established research on the health benefits of greenness by providing a quantitative value to the potential impact of urban greening initiatives on mortality.

“We’ve known that living in greener areas can have a positive impact on our physical and mental health, but there is a lack of data on how changes in greenness distribution can affect death rates across the country,” says study lead author Paige Brochu, a PhD student in the Department of Environmental Health.

 “Our study quantifies the impact of greenness expansion in urban areas and shows how increasing green vegetation could potentially add to a person’s life expectancy. Policymakers and urban planners can use this information to support local climate action plans and ensure that those plans include greening initiatives.”

For the study, Brochu and colleagues utilised publicly available population data from the US Census, mortality data from Centers for Disease Control WONDER system and greenness data from NASA’s Landsat satellites to conduct a nationwide health impact assessment that estimated increased green vegetation impact on all-cause mortality among adults 65 and older in 35 large US metropolitan areas. 

The study period focused on three distinct time periods across a 20-year span: 2000, 2010, and 2019. Using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), a widely used metric that estimates the quantity of green vegetation, the researchers calculated that 34,080-38,187 elderly deaths — or about 15 to 20 deaths per 10,000 seniors — could have been prevented between 2000-2019 with a 0.1 increase in NDVI across all 35 metropolitan areas.

They estimated that overall greenness increased by 2.86 percent between 2000-2010, and 11.11 percent from 2010-2019, with the largest regional increase observed in the South (from .40 percent in 2000 to .47 percent in 2019).

Brochu notes that greening may not be feasible in all cities, due to differences in climate, water sources, urbanisation, and landscape, but city planners can use the study findings to examine local changes in greenness over time and develop an appropriate and effective climate action plan in their cities.

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