Editorial

Serious conservation can increase forest contribution to GDP

 A study conducted by the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) in collaboration with the Forestry Commission (FC), the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), and Warnel School of Forestry of the Uni­versity of Georgia in the USA in 2022 as a sequel or follow-up to a 2014 one has revealed the declin­ing contribution of the forestry sector to the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

While in 2014, the sector, par­ticularly forest products and log­ging, contributed 2.0 per cent of the country’s GDP in the sum of GH¢10.83 billion, the findings of the study commissioned in 2022 state that from 2014 to 2023, the contribution of the forest sector to the GDP on the average was 1.5 per cent.

This must call for concern because a forest is one natural resource, which, when kept in shape, has a huge importance for the society that owns it.

Forests offer provisioning ser­vices such as providing food, wa­ter, wood, medicine and numer­ous other such products which society uses on a daily basis.

They also facilitate numerous regulating services such as carbon sequestration, flood control, plant pollination, and water filtration.

Besides, they are habitats for numerous animals and flora.

Forests are generally sources of livelihoods for some people such as loggers, hunters, herbal medicine practitioners and their assistants.

The experts say it generally that forests are integral to the country’s economy and socie­tal well-being, as they support livelihoods, provide food and raw materials, contribute to climate resilience and sustaining

agriculture.

In spite of these benefits, which underpin the survival of society, it is clear that forests in Ghana are not well taken care of.

It is unavoidable that as popu­lation grows, there would be the need for agricultural expansion to produce more food to feed the growing population.

However, such an undertaking must be orderly, not haphazardly as the case is now, regulated by law or proper rules.

In the olden days, members of the society abided by traditional rules and regulations as to their use of land and how to deal with forests.

Fuel wood collection and creation of more settlements to meet growing populations today also undermine forest conser­vation, which was a norm for society in time past to derive all the benefits the forest existed to provide.

Today, people, particularly, illegal loggers and illegal miners, do not care about conservation of the forest as they are only in­terested in what they can exploit from it for their selfish gains.

The result is that most of the benefits that can formally contribute to the country’s GDP are lost.

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