Latest News

Ghana bans mining on forest reserves in order to reduce environmental damage

Ghana bans mining on forest reserves in order to reduce environmental damage
Ghana bans mining on forest reserves in order to reduce environmental damage

Ghana has banned mining within forest reserves, as part of an environmental protection program aimed at protecting water bodies and halting the deforestation.

Africa's leading gold producer, which is also the world's largest, is fighting a "surge" in?poorly-regulated small-scale mining, which is destroying cacao farms, degrading rivers and forests, and increasing sustainability risks for its mining industry, sparking protests.

Industrial miners have reported frequent incursions of illegal operators on concessions. This has forced key operators such as Gold Fields AngloGold Ashanti Newmont and Asante Gold, to increase their investments in surveillance drones, security systems, and community engagement programmes.

According to data from the government, illegal mining has spread across 13 of Ghana's sixteen regions, including important cocoa belts in Ashanti, Western, and Eastern. The authorities have overhauled the sector, licensing artisanal miners, creating community schemes and providing security to stop illegal mining and gold trading.

Introduced in 2022, the Environmental Protection (Mining in Forest Reserves Regulations) allows controlled mining in forests reserves.

The ministry announced in a late-Wednesday statement that the repeal went into effect after a constitutional period of 21 days. It will give the second largest cocoa producer in the world stronger legal tools for protecting forests, water resources and farmland.

Healthy forests protect our farms and give life to communities. "Clean rivers ensure our drinking water and future," said Acting Environment Minister Emmanuel ArmahKofi Buah.

Daryl Mensah Bonsu, an environmental advocate, explained that the move represents a'major shift' in Ghanaian environmental policy. It restores protections for forest after opening up nearly 90% of reserves to mining.

"The repeal will not solve all problems. We have the opportunity to address teething issues arising from logging, farming and to implement a national development program to restore and grow forests for present and future generations." Christian Akorlie is the reporter. Maxwell Akalaare Adombila is the author. Mark Potter (editing)

(source: Reuters)