Sunday, 16 July 2017

BEEKEEPING: A LIVELIHOOD ACTIVITY TO ADDRESS POVERTY AND COMBAT ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION.





By Friday Simbaya, Iringa

Tanzania is a mega-biodiversity country with six globally recognized biodiversity hotspots. The country is home to about twenty percent of Africa’s large mammals and has at least 14,500 known species. Tanzania is among 15 countries with the highest number of endemic as well as threatened species. Tanzania accounts for more than one-third of total plant species in Africa and ranks twelfth globally in terms of bird species.

According to Lawyers’ Environmental Action Team’s Communication Officer, Miss Edina Tibaijuka, forests and wildlife contribute immensely to ecosystem services in Tanzania. “They produce food and water, they control climate and diseases, and they support nutrient cycles and crop pollination and have spiritual and recreational benefits” says Miss Tibaijuka. In essence human life in Tanzania and in most - if not all - parts of the world cannot be detached from surrounding environments and ecosystems. Communities in Tanzania and around the world should invest heavily in managing wildlife and forest resources, due to their high value

Regrettably, forest and wildlife resources in Tanzania are susceptible to lots of management challenges. Their survival are threatened by the presence of conflicting and contradictory laws and policies, corruption, lack of integrated framework for natural resources management, improper land use planning, weak national capacity for environmental impact assessment, and rapid population growth to mention but a few. These challenges lead to poverty, drying up of water sources, disappearing of vegetation, and climate change. The bottom line is, forests and wildlife resources are in danger due to high incidences of poverty of surrounding village communities.

Given the increase of deforestation and illegal utilization practices, LEAT, under the grant from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is currently implementing a four-year project known as “Citizens Engaging in Government Oversight in Natural Resources Management (CEGO-NRM)”. The project aims to nurture the engagement of citizens in the management of natural resources particularly forests and wildlife. The project is empowering citizens, through capacity building trainings and advocacy, in order to increase their awareness on natural resources management and social accountability monitoring. Moreover, the project is supporting villagers to venture into alternative, but environmental friendly, income generating activities, beekeeping in particular.

To this end, LEAT provided a total of 700 modern beehives to 32 groups of beekeepers in 32 villages in Mufindi and Iringa districts, Iringa region. Consequence to that, LEAT provided them with protective gears, beekeeping manuals and tailored trainings to encourage eco-friendly livelihood practices. Ms. Tibaijuka says, “The aim of relieving villagers with beekeeping projects is to offer village communities with alternative and approachable ways of gaining economic income thus sustaining adjacent forest and wildlife resources.”

Tambalang’ombe village in Sadani Ward in Mufindi District, Iringa region is one of the 32 project villages that were given 22 beehives out of 700 provided by LEAT. The secretary of its  beekeeping group, Mr. Eleuteri Kipembe says, “beekeeping has helped us to protect the village forest reserve from destruction because people fear to burn forests due to beehives that are in village forest, and to date about 14 beehives have been colonized. They also fear that if caught they will be criminally prosecuted.”

Similarly, Ms. Maida Makalimoto, the secretary of the beekeeping group at Igombavanu village in Mufindi district, said that their group started in 2016 after being given 22 beehives by LEAT. She went on to say that to now there are 16 of the 22 beehives with bees and they are were hoping to harvest honey by the end of June 2017. "Honey is used as food, as a cure for various diseases and is a good source of income and eventually reduces poverty," added Makalimoto.

Beekeeping is not only supplementing village households with nutritious food but also plays part in securing extra income thus slowing down deforestation. In few villages, the establishment of shed for beehives or a bee house containing a number of beehives (apiaries) has slowed down the unproductive use of forest resources.
Members of the supported beekeeping groups now participate in managing forest reserves as forest reserves provide flowers and home for bee colonies. Miss Tibaijuka added that, other specific objectives of the project is to bring efficiency to the protection, maintenance and use of forest resources and to foster villagers’ entrepreneurship which will enable them to start projects along the honey’s value chain and thus be able to sell honey, beeswax, pollen and other bee produces.

The thirty-two supported groups in Mufindi and Iringa districts aside, all Tanzanians - both men and women -have a chance to participate in beekeeping. Tanzania is blessed with areas that are conducive for safe and profitable beekeeping ventures. Beekeeping requires little start-up capital but has many social, economic, and environmental benefits. With proper understanding of national policies, laws, and regulations, Tanzanians will be able to start and run beekeeping projects and obtain tangible economic benefits and conserve their environments.

Moreover, beekeeping can also contribute individual and national efforts of tackling climate Change, added Miss Tibaijuka. The effects of climate change are in Tanzania in general and Iringa in particular are easy to see. The weather patterns have changed greatly in the recent years. Unsustainable uses of natural resources and emissions of greenhouses in the atmosphere are on the rise. The cutting of forests results into the release of stored carbon dioxide in to the atmosphere. The Minister of Natural Resources and Tourism in his 2015/16 budget speech stated that a total of 372,000 hectares of forests are lost each year due to unsustainable anthropogenic activities in the country, especially on forests that are managed by district councils. With big beekeeping projects, communities will conserve biodiversity thus create carbon sinks for greenhouse gases.

To wind up, Miss Tibaijuka stated that the country has requisite beekeeping policy, legal and regulatory regime that if properly translated into action and enforced will make the beekeeping industry to grow and thrive in Tanzania. These include the National Beekeeping Policy of 1998 and the Beekeeping Act of 2002. These not only allow the establishment of national, district and village beekeeping reserves but also individual beekeeping farms. Unfortunately, many Tanzanians do not know them. Efforts should be made to make them aware of them and seize opportunities offered by the Beekeeping Act.

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