Accra, Nov. 23, - Charcoal
production and usage is said to form the bulk of Ghana’s energy supply and
consumption with the product contributing more than 60 per cent to the energy
sector.
Charcoal is also said to be the
main fuel that is used by majority of households in the urban centres.
Various presenters at a National
Charcoal forum held in Accra on Thursday have therefore called for a concerted
effort to ensure sustainable production in the charcoal value chain.
All the presentations at the
forum were of the view that majority of Ghanaians, especially in the urban
areas, continue to use charcoal as a source of energy in their households while
those in the hinterlands, who produce the charcoal, rather use more of
firewood.
A new research has also revealed
that a total of 589,891.864 tons of charcoal was produced in 2016 in the
country with the Brong Ahafo Region being a major producing area, accounting
for 34.35 per cent of the production.
Northern Region is the second
highest charcoal producing area with 26.74 per cent production while the
Western and the Greater Accra Regions being the least producers with 0.oo3 per
cent and 0.005 per cent respectively.
The National Charcoal forum was
organised by Tropenbos Ghana, an Environmental non-governmental organization,
in collaboration with the Ministry of Energy, Environmental Protection Agency
and Energy Commission.
The theme for the forum was:
“Property, Access and Exclusion along the Charcoal Value Chain in Ghana”.
The forum was held to discuss a
research carried out on Charcoal production in Ghana, as part of a five-year
Charcoal production research project, being undertaken by Tropenbos, in
partnership with the Universities of Copenhagen and the Kwame Nkrumah
University of Science and Technology (KNUST).
Mr Wisdom Ahiataku-Togobo,
Director of the Renewable Energy Unit of the Ministry of Energy, who made a
presentation at the forum, said through charcoal production, more than 60 per
cent of energy, was lost in the conversion from wood to charcoal and a further
70 to 80 per cent was through inefficient cook stoves.
He said unfortunately through the
production of charcoal, trees that were expected to be carbon sinks and in turn
produce oxygen for humans and animals were being cut for charcoal and firewood
in an unsustainable manner.
He therefore suggested that the
charcoal supply chain, involving wood production, charcoal production,
transportation, wholesaler, retail and consumer, should be well regulated
through the provision of a sound policy that would help reduce the negative
impacts of the industry on the forestry sector.
He said Ghana’s Nationally
Determined Contributions (NDCs), thankfully, had made provisions relating to
cooking energy, and it was ensuring the expansion and adoption of market-based
cleaner cooking solution.
He said under the NDCs, Ghana
would work to ensure the scaling up of LPG from 5.5 per cent to 50 per in the
peri-urban areas by 2030, and also scale up access and adoption of two million
efficient cook stoves up by 2030.
The country was also working to
adopt efficient charcoal production technologies and techniques.
Professor Christian Pilegaard
Hansen, a lecturer at the Danish Centre for Forest, Landscape and Planning,
University of Copenhagen, said the Charcoal project that seek to induce
knowledge and information for policy discussion was being sponsored with a five million Ghana cedis from DANIDA.
He said it would help provide
knowledge on the charcoal commodity chain, profit, distribution and
livelihoods, as well as the charcoal production dynamic and its impact on
Ghana’s vegetation cover.
He said under the project that
started in 2015, three PhD students and some Masters student were being trained
to study on charcoal production and help inform the public on the issue.
He said the forum was therefore
to help present the first batch of research on charcoal undertaken by the
researches to help solicit views of stakeholders on the findings.
Professor Samuel Kwabena Nketiah,
Director of Tropenbos said the Charcoal forum would continue to be an annual
programme to deliberate on charcoal production until a more regularised
programme was adopted to regulate the production of charcoal in a more
sustainable manner.
GNA

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