Grandiose Parlor

  • Home
  • About
  • Archives
  • Blogroll
  • Contact
  • Multimedia
  • Category
    • Advocacy
      • Activism
      • Human Rights
    • Africa
      • Angola
      • Botswana
      • Cameroon
      • Diaspora
      • Egypt
      • Ethiopia
      • Ivory Coast
      • Kenya
      • Liberia
      • Libya
      • Niger
      • Nigeria
        • EFCC
        • Niger-Delta
      • Rwanda
      • Sierra Leone
      • Somalia
      • South Africa
      • Sudan
        • Darfur
      • Tanzania
      • Uganda
      • Zimbabwe
    • Aid
    • America
    • Aviation
    • Business and Entrepreneurship
    • Cartoon
    • China
    • Conflict
    • Corruption
    • Data
    • Democracy
    • Education
    • elections
    • Entries on Old Grandiose Palor (Blogger)
    • Environment
    • Governance
    • Health
    • Idea
    • Immigration
    • Links
    • Media
      • Blogosphere
      • Event
        • TED Africa
      • Hibiscus Project
      • video
    • Mozambique
    • Oil
    • Sports
    • Technology
      • Energy
      • ICT
        • Web 2.0
    • Wisdom
    • Words of Wisdom
    • Zambia
  • Subscribe via RSS

There is more to food poverty than food!

May 6th, 2008  |  Published in Africa, Nigeria  |  2 Comments



In Sub-Saharan Africa, wood is one of the most common sources of energy for cooking, and it’s common to see wood sellers dotting the landscape across the region. While there is nothing wrong in wood trade, but their sources may be.

The picture below (courtesy of BBC) shows a man in Kano, northern Nigeria, cutting down a tree by his house to sell as firewood.

treechopper.jpg

In order to boost purchasing power, some people affected by the increasing cost of food have resorted to chopping down trees to process and sell as firewood.

Many of those trees were planted to help slow down rate of desertification – one of the causal factors of environmental degradation and food poverty in the region.

As food crisis continues, and more and more people cut down valuable trees, it becomes apparent how cyclical and vicious the problem gets. The end result is a flourishing endemic of continued environmental degradation, drought, and an expanding circle of poverty. And it’s just a matter of time before these factors cumulate into an event of catastrophic proportions.

The question is: “How do you break the circle?”

Responses

Feed
  1. Femi says:

    May 6th, 2008 at 4:50 pm (#)

    Breaking the cycle of poverty requires persistence and well planned and executed interventions.

    The trees being chopped for firewood is one intervention to slow desert encroachment - an issue that affects food security. But it appears those trees are vulnerable to the axe of an hungry man!

    Would the man have refrained from cutting down the tree for firewood if he knows how relevant it is to his social and economic condition?

    The hopelessness of the situation is disturbing, very disturbing.

  2. omotaylor says:

    July 7th, 2008 at 10:15 am (#)

    Testing for updates

Recent Posts

  • Words of Wisdom 1: How big is your crib?
  • Obasanjo, Agagu indicted over power projects
  • Nigeria: Land of Opportunities…and Nightmares
  • Nigerian Capitalism: Show me the money!
  • Gani Fawehinmi: Withdrawal of my honorary degree by Ondo State Government

Recent Comments

  • Tayo on Obasanjo, Agagu indicted over power projects
  • Baba on Nigeria: Land of Opportunities…and Nightmares
  • Tayo on Nigeria: Land of Opportunities…and Nightmares
  • Ababoy on Nigerian Capitalism: Show me the money!
  • omotaylor on Nigerian Capitalism: Show me the money!

RSS Updates from AfricanLoft

  • McCain Defends Obama?
  • Chiedu Ifeozo: Reinventing the World of Poetry by Giving Back
  • Raila Odinga: “Africa is a Continent of Huge Contrasts”. Kenyan Prime Minister Addresses Nigerian Media House
  • Africa’s Emerging Markets
  • Equatorial Guinea: Poverty Rife in Africa’s “Kuwait”

RSS Jobs in Africa

  • Logistics Manager – Ethiopia
  • Monitoring and Evaluation Manager - Ethiopia
  • Gender Advisor - Ethiopia
  • Finance Director - Ethiopia
  • Deputy Chief of Party – Ethiopia


Pages

  • About
  • Archives
  • Blogroll
  • Contact
  • Multimedia

Categories

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org


©2008 Grandiose Parlor
Powered by WordPress using the Gridline Lite theme by Graph Paper Press.