Ethiopia plants 200 million trees to break the world record

By , K24 Digital
On Tue, 30 Jul, 2019 00:00 | < 1 min read
Some government offices were closed to allow civil servants to take part in the campaign. Photo/BBC

Addis, Monday

Ethiopia has planted more than 200 million trees in a day, officials say, in what they believe is a world record.

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed led the project, which aims to counter the effects of deforestation and climate change in the drought-prone country.

Some public offices have been shut down to allow civil servants to take part. The UN says Ethiopia’s forest coverage declined from 35 per cent of the total land in the early 20th Century to a little above four per cent in the 2000s.  

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Abiy launched the tree-planting exercise as part of his Green Legacy Initiative, which is taking part in 1,000 sites across the country. Officials were assigned to count the seedlings being planted, reports BBC’s Kalkidan Yibeltal in the capital, Addis Ababa.

Ethiopia’s Minister of Innovation and Technology Getahun Mekuria tweeted that more than 220 million trees have been planted:

The aim is to plant a total of four billion trees. Promotional videos have run on state media urging the public to plant and care for trees, our reporter says. The current World Record for planting trees in a single day is held by India, which used 800,000 volunteers to plant more than 50 million trees in 2016.

Critics of  Abiy say he is using the campaign to distract the public from the challenges his government is facing, including ethnic conflicts which have forced some 2.5 million people from their homes. - BBC

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