Jakarta Globe, Amantha Perera, Jun 08, 2015
Colombo, Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka’s new mangrove protection scheme, the world’s first country-wide initiative, is relying on women like Michel Priyadarshani, head of a fisherwomen’s group in eastern Ambantotam village.
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| A worker carries a sack of plastic bottles collected from the beach for a recycling project during World Environment Day in Colombo, Sri Lanka on June 5, 2015. (Reuters Photo/Dinuka Liyanawatte) |
Colombo, Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka’s new mangrove protection scheme, the world’s first country-wide initiative, is relying on women like Michel Priyadarshani, head of a fisherwomen’s group in eastern Ambantotam village.
Priyadarshani
and her colleagues did not understand the importance of mangroves for the
ecosystem, including the fish population, until they benefited from a program
offering microcredit in return for looking after the coastal forests.
“Now we
know — and from us, our husbands and our community also have become aware,”
Priyadarshani said.
Since 1997,
Sudeesa, a national organization that works to protect coastal ecosystems, has
given women living near mangrove forests financial assistance — mainly loans of
$50 to $2,000 each — incentivizing them to care for the delicate trees.
Now the
program is about to go island-wide. Sudeesa, together with the Sri Lankan
government and US-based environmental conservation group Seacology, recently
launched a five-year, $3.4 million mangrove preservation initiative.
Sri Lanka
is the first nation to promise to protect all its mangroves, experts said.
Mangrove
trees grow in saltwater, forming a vital part of the natural cycle in coastal
lagoons. Fish and other marine creatures like prawns use the deep roots as
breeding areas.
The forests
protect coastal communities from abrupt tidal shifts and storms, while slowing
shore erosion.
“People who
live near mangroves tell us the trees act as a buffer against the wind and
heavy rains, breaking their intensity just before they make landfall,” said Douglas
Thisera, director for coastal conservation at Sudeesa, formerly known as the
Small Fishers Federation of Lanka.
Mangrove
swamps also store carbon, sequestering it in the top few meters of underwater
soil and keeping it there longer than other trees.
Micro-loans
K D
Wijitha, who runs a group bringing together women from 23 villages in the
northwestern Kalapitiya area, said they had learned to look after the mangrove
forests.
“We make
sure that they are safe,” she said.
Thanks to
the Sudeesa program, Kristina Jospin from Samadigama village in northwestern
Puttalam District received training and financial aid to operate a small
bakery, which allows her to support her sick husband and four children.
Sudeesa
credit officer Suvinetha de Silva said the program usually targets the poorest
women, who are unable to seek credit from banks.
The new
national scheme aims to set up 1,500 community groups around Sri Lanka’s 48
lagoons, which will offer alternative job training and micro-loans to 15,000
people. The groups will be responsible for the upkeep of designated mangrove
forests.
Pilot
projects showed a high success rate, said Duane Silverstein, executive director
of Seacology. Almost 2,000 loans were made to women, with a repayment rate of
over 96 percent.
“With very
small loans of around $100, several of the women were so successful that they
already employed additional women,” he said.
Half of
loan recipients under the new program will be widows, while the rest will be
male and female school dropouts.
Seacology
and Sudeesa officials said each community group will be responsible for around
8.5 hectares of mangrove forest. The government has agreed to provide rangers
to patrol the forests.
The program
also plans to replant 3,885 hectares of mangroves.
The new
government of President Maithripala Sirisena has brought the island’s 8,815
hectares of mangroves under the Forest Ordinance Act, making it illegal for
anyone to exploit them for commercial purposes.
“It is an
extremely vital decision because now all mangroves around the island can be
protected with the active participation of the Forestry Department,” said
Sudeesa chairman Anuradha Wickramasinghe.
Prawn
damage
Some three
decades ago, Sri Lanka had at least 98,842 acres of mangroves, Thisera said.
But the bulk has been destroyed due to commercial exploitation and firewood
use.
“The
biggest threats to mangroves in Sri Lanka include prawn farms, which have been
greatly curtailed in recent years, collateral damage from the civil war, and
impoverished people cutting down mangroves to use or sell as charcoal,”
Seacology’s Silverstein said.
The worst
damage occurred in the northwest of the island nation, where commercial prawn
farms took off in the 1990s. But most of these farms have been abandoned in the
last few years due to the spread of disease.
The new
mangrove protection scheme plans to introduce other trees that can provide an
alternative fuel source, such as coconut husks.
Silverstein
said the government’s enthusiasm for protecting the mangrove forests could push
other countries in the region to follow suit.
Defense
Secretary B.M.U.D. Basnayake told Silverstein the national armed forces could
help with replanting efforts.
Sudeesa’s
Wickramasinghe said the program’s success would depend on how far local
communities buy into it.
“We have to
make them understand the mangroves are a boost to their lives and their
incomes,” he added.
Thomson Reuters Foundation

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