“The rehabilitation of Gorongosa National Park in Central Mozambique represents one of the great conservation opportunities in the world today.” Goroongosa.net web site. I have been fortunate during the past couple of years to be able to visit the Gorongosa National Park in central Mozambique, during development missions for the World Bank. We were looking at assisting a local town to provide a sustainable source of water. The National Park is very large and brought to mind a vision of Eden in its tranquility and wealth of diverse species of flora and fauna. The park was all but destroyed during the long and brutal Mozambican civil war but a programme of the government and the US Carr Foundation was begun in 2006 to restore the park. Continue reading “Gorongosa – Eden restored”
Category: 2 Development work
Charcoal and deforestation
[Note: A selection of charcoal images is now available for purchase and download from the Image Market – HERE.]
If you travel virtually anywhere in rural Africa you cannot fail to notice a growing environmental crisis – deforestation caused by charcoaling. All households have basic energy needs which have to be met in the preparation of food, heating, boiling of water and other requirements. Traditionally these needs have been met with the use of fuelwood. With ever growing urbanization throughout Africa, fuelwood is not an option – the vegetation is just not available in urban fringe areas. Other options of electricity, kerosine and LPG gas are beyond the affordability of the vast majority of the poverty stricken urban fringe populations across the continent and so charcoal has become the only possible choice. Continue reading “Charcoal and deforestation”
African Development
I have spent all my working life in Africa. This has taken me to 24 different countries, working in water resources management (and taking a few hundred photographs along the way). One thing you learn early in this type of work is that if you can’t ‘go with the flow’, you shouldn’t be there! Things seldom work according to plan. Everyone who does such work has a pack of stories to tell – you can read some of mine in Category 3 – “Travel experiences in Africa”.
I hasten to note that although many of these experiences lay bare the ubiquitous low level chaos which bedevils most of what happens on the continent and is also part of its enduring charm, it is the people who really count. Across the length and breadth of Africa you will find the very best of people, soldiering on against all the odds. The first story is “How to catch a flight from Abuja.”