PRIME Minister James Marape has officially launched the Forest Carbon Pilot Project yesterday at the Afore District Sub-Station, Oro province.
The new project is unlike the Carbon Trading Program where countries are given credits for just conserving their Rainforest. The Managalas Forest Carbon Pilot Project is a sustainable integrated land development project where the actual rainforest is conserved and the grass plains are reforested with cash crops like coffee, coconut and even timber.
Marape commended the Governor for Oro, Gary Juffa for his leadership in this area and urged the people of Afore to work with him on the project.
To help start off the project, the Prime Minister committed K5 million to the project.
“This is to ensure what we are talking about becomes a reality. We do not want to come and just talk about it. We want the project to really happen,” Prime Minister Marape said.
The Prime Minister told the people that the benefits for this project may take time to manifest but it will benefit their children and their children’s children over the many years to come.
He urged them to use the opportunity to go into agricultural SMEs and the government will give price support so that they sell their produce at a good K6 per kilogram for coffee and K3.00 per kilogram for cocoa.
The Prime Minister also said the government will set up buying hubs in the district so that the people do not have to travel all the way to Popondetta to sell their produce.
“This will not be the only developments taking place. We will also bring in schools. I am going to give K1 million to provincial government for the only High School in Afore,” he said.
“We will also give K500,000 to be distributed equally to schools in the Afore Local Level Government.
“We will also fix and upgrade the road. I will be giving K5 million to Governor Juffa to continue with the road upgrade already happening from Oro Bay.”
Prime Minister Marape said when the conservation project becomes a reality; your schools, hospitals and roads must become better. Conservation has money in it and it will come in a holistic way.
According to a report in the Vivid Economy in 2020, nature based solutions such as these not only conserve biodiversity and strengthen community resilience; it also has the potential to generate USD 800 billion in annual revenues by 2050.
-Press Release-
Omie Tribe land is illegally included in Managalas platue for conservation and now for the carbon trading without proper land mediation and signing, from clan chiefs and ILG clan vetting, therefore this carbon trading is illegal for claiming Omie Resource development Corporation tribes land and their forests. This must be resolved amicably by the carbon trading executives office of PMJM and Managalas conservation and carbon trading pilot project.