Opinions of Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Auteur: Amponsem Joshua

Call for Climate Action Part 2

Continued from Part 1 As part of the Millennium Developmental Goal, food security is one of the sectors that drive most developing countries into famine and extreme poverty. Ghana currently depends on Agriculture for a higher percentage of employment; the agriculture sector provides as with foods and has a significant percentage of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Farming basically depends on the fertility of lands and more importantly weather conditions.

Over exploitation in Ghana has led to increased soil degradation caused by soil-nutrient mining, erosion, deforestation and desertification, water logging, falling water tables, over salinization and potentially, climate change render barren the marginal cropland the poor had counted on for survival. Aside farming, fisheries play a key role in livelihoods for people along the 550km coastline.

Fisheries, both marine and inland (on rivers, lakes and lagoons) play a vital role in livelihoods and are crucial for nutrition in Ghana (on the average, 24kg of fish is consumed by every Ghanaian annually). The fisheries sector accounts for 1.4 percent of GDP (Ghana Statistical Service, 2014) and employs at least 2 million people, including 135,000 fishers in the marine sector (Finegold et al., 2010)

The impacts of and responses to climate change have significant implications on the fisheries sector and the lives of poor people (Allisonet al., 2005).

The marine fisheries are expected to be adversely affected by climate change. Increasing temperature means, increasing ocean surface temperature; Ghana receives bumper harvest which is attributed by colder water surfaces which results in upwelling- regarded as bumper fish catch. With increasing temperatures, sea surfaces will be hotter and will result in most pelagic organisms shifting habitat to depths closer to the benthic zone. Less fish catch gradually will lead Ghana to food insecurity, more food importations and higher economic crisis.

Climate change-related initiatives in Ghana are increasing, and the government is committed to mainstreaming climate change responses into multi-scale and multi-sector planning and policy processes (MEST, 2011). However, there is increasing over exploitation accompanied with these initiatives and therefore there is no significant resulting climate action plans in Ghana. World leaders are meeting in New York City for a UN summit on the climate crisis this September.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is urging governments to support an ambitious global agreement to dramatically reduce global warming pollution.If all nations will agree to the democratically effects of climate change impacts on their citizens and how it can ruin economies, render millions homeless and destruction of natural resources, we can all witness a secured future for generations yet unborn.

The Peoples Climate Marchhappening in the United States of America (New York City), 21stof September will bring together the voices of many climate change advocates not because climate change is just an eventual topic of discussion but a generational impact that we suffers today, tomorrow and generations to come if fervent actions are not taken. Let us all, every individual; raise his or her voice in support of climate action at local and global level. Thank You.