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Liberia's
EPA: Global Challenges and
Benefits "
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1940 - 11112008f- Two- Soccer Legends
Friday,
June 4, 2010
The
Environmental Protection
Agency of Liberia (EPA) is
mandated to protect the human
health and well-being of the
Liberian people and others
living within the nation's
jurisdiction.
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Emmanuel Munyeneh
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This
directive also includes the
protection of our ecosystem
and biodiversity, species and
waterways, the air we breathe
as well as the life of our
natural habitat including our
wilderness and mountains.
Understandably,
the EPA is less than a decade
old and is not prepare to
confront or catch up with most
of the 21 century challenges
of global environmental
problems, regimes, and
politics. But with a vision
that encompasses a wide range
of strategic planning,
teamwork, and leadership that
can reconcile scientific
expertise with democratic
values, progress can be made.
With
the assistance of municipal
authorities, other line
ministries, and the
availability of logistics, the
handling and disposal of toxic
or chemical wastes could be
resolved. Maybe, another small
problem could be the building
of engineered landfill sites
for the disposal of garbage,
which should be out of the
reach of the community and
constructed in a way that does
not affect our ground and
surface water. A need for
extension in rural Liberia is
necessary.
Historically,
global environmental movements
have been noted for raising
issues that are sometimes
based on limited scientific
evidence and self-centered
emotionalism. At other times,
it is an individual simply
reacting out of emotion to
score political points.
However, of commonality
between environmental
movements and governments is
the consensus that adverse
human interaction with the
environment is responsible for
global warming.
Actions to mitigate the impact
of global warming have
resulted into nations taking
voluntary actions to reduce
CO2 emissions. While the
European Union has set an
emission trading system (ETS),
the US is proposing a Cap and
Trade (Waxman- Markey) or
carbon tax as a means of
reducing emissions. Less we
forget, deforestation
constitutes 20% of carbon
emissions which is more than
emissions from transportation.
But what is the role of Africa
in this context? The
continent, a member of the
Group of 77 and China
initially contended that
developed countries should
take ownership of the level of
greenhouse gas emissions from
their rapid economic
activities. But pollution
knows no boundary and that
action from one country could
eventually
affect another innocent
country through transboundary
air pollution (TAP).
This
proposal by the Group of 77,
and China, after series of
negotiations of the COP
ranging from Kyoto, Marrakech
and Bali, consummated into the
adoption of first, the Clean
Development Mechanism (CDM,
which seeks to reduce GHG by
allowing firms in developed
countries to
meet some of their emissions
targets by initiating GHG
reduction projects in
developing countries where
costs are lower), and later
Reducing Emission from
Deforestation and Forests
Degradation (REDD) framework.
Reducing
Emission from Deforestation
and Forests Degradation
(REDD), is a policy approach
that has emerged in global
climate talks intended to
safeguard the loss of forest
and the conservation of
biodiversity as well. Simply
put, developed countries will
be able to buy
carbon credits from developing
countries by investing in the
protection of their forests.
The Congo River Basin just
received around $500m from
Norway and the UK for this
exercise.
Liberia. like many African
countries stands to benefit
from this arrangement, given
the fact that we have one of
the largest rainforests in the
West Africa region. But there
may be serious hurdles in our
way. First, the capacities of
the following entities the
EPA, FDA, Fish and Wildlife
Services (if we have one),
Bureau of Land Management (if
we have one) must be enhanced
through training and
education.
Second, the Forestry
Development Authority (FDA)
must amend or design rules
that avoid “investment in
influence” an enforcement
mechanism that protects our
forests from poachers and
illegal loggers. The Fish and
Wildlife Service must ensure
the management of our
ecosystem and biodiversity. I
guess, the Fish and Wildlife
Service (FWS) must also
organize a list of the
nation's endangered
species by designing a habitat
conservation plan so that they
are not extinct.
Third, land has become an
issue in Liberia, and rural
dwellers do not have deeds to
their land, which poses a real
problem for the effective
implementation of a carbon
credit program. The UN
framework for sustainable
forest management calls on
governments to take into
consideration the role and
place of indigenous people in
the governance of natural
resources. It is necessary to
engage rural poor through a
deliberative democracy
approach so that their views,
though customary, may find
their way into a statutory
arrangement. Respecting the
moral agency of our indigenous
people in the economic and
political decision making
process cannot be overstated.
Lastly, EPA must work with
carbon credit developers or
industries from developed
countries seeking carbon to
design a workable framework
(measuring forests carbon and
baselines) so that rural or
local communities will benefit
from these arrangements. The
EPA must also put itself in a
strategic bargaining position
so that Liberia does not
become a victim of global
carbon prices manipulation.
Further, EPA must begin the
process of engaging the
international community for
the purpose of tapping into
some of the resources that are
available under the Global
Environmental Facility, and
the Global Forest Fund.
The most important problem
that may arise is how we
create a balancing act between
the drivers of deforestation
such as farmers, loggers and
forestry-related agri-businesses,
and the various institutions
that should ensure the
effective and efficient
governance of our natural
resources? The move to
adaptation (from reliance of
forests to other economic
alternatives) is difficult,
and finding the right policy
alternative out of a series of
rational policy analyses to
this question is a real
challenge to the governing
authority. This calls for
sound economic and governance
reform policies that considers
all the complexities and
players involved.
Is
this difficult? Yes! Is this
insurmountable? No! Can we?
Yes we can, but with the right
public policy framework and
knowledge base in place.
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