 |
|
| Dr. Somah |
|
Mr. Morris K. Koffa, Executive Director,
Liberian Environmental Watch (LEW); The Interim
President, University of Liberia; Officials of
Government present; LIHEDE Representatives Dr.
Horlin Carter, Mrs. Henrietta White-Holder, and
Mr. Augustus Menyongar. Distinguished Guests;
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I bring you heartfelt greetings from the
officials and members of LIHEDE in the Diaspora.
I am very happy to be with you this morning at
this famous forum, and I want to thank the
Liberian Environmental Watch and other
organizers and sponsors of this program for
granting me the opportunity to bring to you the
message that protecting the environment is a
must in Liberia
today more than ever before. Our nation is
facing serious deforestation challenges and
environmental degradation at a rapid pace that
if not checked in time, the road to national
reconstruction will be very difficult, and
quality of life of future generations of
Liberians will diminish greatly.
My brothers and sisters about 30 to 40 years ago
when I was growing up in Liberia, I could walk
across town in the hot sun and be fine without
drinking a glass of water. But today I don’t
think I can walk across town in the hot sun
anymore without drinking a lot of water,
sweating heavily, or in the worst case fainting
because, as a result of deforestation and other
environmental activities, the hot sun now
penetrates the human skin. In fact, in today’s Liberia, handkerchief is not enough
to wipe our sweats anymore as we now need towels
because of the changing climate. Even the
raindrops in Liberia are now heavy enough to cause
a major flood. In other words, Liberia today is no longer the
Liberia of the last 30 or 40
years, and without serious national efforts at
environment protection in
Liberia, it will be difficult
to tell what will happen to Liberia in the next 30 to 40 years.
And this is why I think the Liberian
Environmental Watch, the Liberia Environmental
Protection Agency, and other similar
environmental protection groups in Liberia
deserve credit for making available to the
Liberian public this kind of conference to
create public awareness about the state of the
environment in Liberia, and emphasize the need
for all Liberians to work together to protect
the environment.
We need a comprehensive environmental protection
plan in Liberia
to help safeguard ourselves and our homeland
from global warming, malnutrition, diarrhea, and
cardio-respiratory diseases resulting from hot
tropical heat waves, droughts, extreme weather
events, and degraded ecosystems. Our nation’s
natural beauty of abundance forests covering
nearly 14 million acres, including 230 species
of useable timber such as Mahogany, palm trees,
some of which have several heads, sacred
oracles, Walnut, and Makere red ironwood (Ekki
for house and bridge building) Teak, Whismore,
Camwood, Abura, and Niango, as well as wildlife
such as elephants, viviparous toad, cross river
gorilla, water buffalo, lions, zebra duiker,
leopards, diana monkey, white mangabey,
chimpanzees, pygmy hippopotamus, the only kind
in the world, and eagles will be lost if the
country is not protected against environmental
pollution, degradation, and deforestation.
In 2007, for example, I wrote two articles that
highlighted the telling effects of deforestation
and other acts of environmental degradation in Liberia, so I won’t bore you with
many historical and scientific details about the
environment here today. The two articles,
“Developing Liberia’s Aquatic Biomass Amid
Incessant Iron Ore Mining” and “The Ganta
Tropical Storm: A Challenge to Liberia’s
Environment,” are self-explanatory and they are
available on the internet. However, for the sake
of this discussion, I want to share a few
thoughts from each of the two articles.
Deforestation and Mass Destruction of Biological
Species
In the article on “Developing Liberia’s Aquatic
Biomass Amid Incessant Iron Ore Mining,” I noted
that the initial phase of iron ore mining and
production requires massive deforestation
activities such as land clearing, road building,
and the destruction of important wildlife
species, animal and human habitats, and mountain
ranges. I spoke about opencast and open-pit
mining processes that are used regularly to
recover the iron ores of Liberia's virgin mountains, which,
oftentimes lead to large-scale deforestation.
Large-scale deforestation activities under the
guise of development often reduce the local
tropical forest area significantly, while the
use heavy equipment in mining operations also
creates erosion, dust, and fossil fuel emissions
for the environment. Deforestation activity
such as road construction can help hunters to
easily reach the dense forests to elephants,
lions, leopards, hippopotamus, and eagles and
other forest animals, which often become easy
prey for hunters as these animals migrate from
one forest area to another.
I said deforestation caused by iron ore mining
operations can lead to severe climate changes
and weather conditions because mining often
encroaches on fragile ecosystems and interferes
with hydrological cycle or weather-controlling
ability of the mountains being exploited for
iron ore. Hydrological cycle refers to the
continuous circulation of water within the
Earth’s hydrosphere that influences a self-
propagating wave in space to combine with
electric and magnetic components or solar
radiation. In essence, what is usually at stake
during any deforestation activity from mining
operations is the need to preserve a healthy
environment for local livelihoods through the
maintenance of biodiversity. Biodiversity,
therefore, underpins the environmental services
as biodegradation, soil aeration, fertilization
and carbon sequestration that are necessary to
maintain productivity, stable, healthy
environment, upon which every nation, including Liberia, depends.
In the same article, I suggested that the
aquatic biomass of Liberia
needs adequate development to facilitate
commercial fishing and canned fish productions,
but pollution is another residual effect of iron
ore mining and timber mining activities that
have profound effects on the environment. I
said environmental destruction such as soil
erosion, air pollution, and contaminated water
not only shorten human lives, destroy homes,
and poison the atmosphere in Liberian towns and
communities, but also make Liberia hotter as we
are now seeing in Liberia today. In other
words, trees are important to lowering the
temperature through shade, as their roots
stabilize soil, and prevent erosion by trapping
soil that would otherwise become silt. But
deforestation creates silt which destroys other
aquatic wildlife because it interferes with
biochemical oxygen demand or the amount of
oxygen required in a system for the breakdown of
organic material and for organisms to breathe in
our tropical waters. Hence, trees along our
riverbanks hold stream banks in place to protect
against flooding and stop silt so that we can
have more cold water fish and other aquatic food
to eat in our nation.
Of course, in the second article on “The Ganta
Tropical Storm: A Challenge to Liberia’s
Environment,” I said The fast pace nature of
unregulated timber exploitation in the Liberian
virgin forests in the 1980s, 1990s, and up to
the mid-2000s at the height of the 14-year
Liberian civil war from 1989 to 2003 seriously
undermined the Liberian virgin forestlands.
Hence, today, after decades of uncoordinated
and unregulated rubber, iron ore, coffee, cocoa,
and timber operations resulting in chemical
wastes, pollution, and mass migration of people
to communities catering to these mining
operations, Liberia has now lost more than 85%
of its virgin productive forest to the
concessions. This also means that the land to
population ratio of these trees cutting
commercial plantations is very high, and poses a
major environmental threat to country and its
people. In other words, at independence in 1847, Liberia had 99.9 percent of virgin
forest and more than 44.5% of the Guinean forest
ecosystem, or a forestland with rich
biodiversity that boasted of more than 2000
species of plants, including 240 valuable timber
species. But the environmental situation in
Liberia worsen ever since the 1926 rubber
plantations agreement with Firestone that led to
the massive felling of trees in Liberian virgin
forestlands by Firestone, B.F. Goodrich, and
other companies for various rubber, coffee,
cocoa, coffee, timber, and iron ore mining
operations.
I also said dry weather and air pollution were
also at a crisis point in Liberia. Dry weather not only leads
to dusty soils, but dust might in turn lead to
dry weather by changing timing in farming and
fishing, which majority of Liberians depends on
to live. I said when all the trees and fertile
grounds are destroyed, we are bound to have a
serious health epidemic in
Liberia
due to the fact that Liberia lacks not only paved roads,
but also lacks effective emission control. As a
result of these things, it has become
fashionable for anything with tires to run in Liberia at the expense of public health, given
the huge transportation shortage after the civil
war has therefore made vehicle pollution the
primary contributor to pollution problems in Liberia
today, particularly environmental issues such as
the greenhouse effect. These kinds of
uncontrollable emission problems are so rampant
in Liberia
that they have become potential cancer hazards.
air pollution cannot be overlooked in any
re-construction efforts in post-conflict
Liberia, as it continues to disable more than
1.1 billion people worldwide and kill between
2.7 million to 3.0 million others annually,
especially in developing nations like Liberia.
My brothers and sisters, according to the
Environmental Protection Agency, outdoor air
pollution associated with vehicles using fossil
fuels in their combustible engines can cause
acute respiratory problems, inflammation of lung
tissue, and aggravation of asthma as well as
increase the risk of cancer. Recent studies have
linked outdoor air pollution to birth defects,
low birth weight, premature births, still births
and infant deaths. Pollution from fossil fuels
are also directly destroying many other areas of
creation, including the ability of plants to
produce and grow food, forests and ecosystems,
algae blooms in sensitive waterways, and acid
rain. I therefore believe that if the current
rate of deforestation and environmental
degradation resulting from iron ore and diamond
mining, and tree felling continue, Liberia will
not be able to enjoy for long its finest climate
and fertile soil for agricultural enterprise to
grow such agricultural products as bananas,
rice, plantain, bitter ball, cassava, Malaguatta
pepper, mushroom, coffee, kola, cocoa, mango,
okra, palm nuts, papaya, rubber. Consequently,
no modern buildings, superhighways, bank
accounts or billion of dollars in our national
coffer will rescue our nation when all sorts of
natural disasters begin to befall our nation as
a result of deforestation, so we in Liberia need
to take precautionary measures to control
destruction of our environment if we don’t want
to end up destroying ourselves as the Ganta
tropical storm has shown.
Our nation will suffer the largest crop losses
when all the forest are gone since many
Liberians are highly dependent on subsistence
farming or agriculture for basic survival, as
agriculture contributes upward of about 30 per
cent of country’s Gross Domestic Product. In
essence, since the dawn of creation, there has
always been interaction between human beings and
the environment. The pristine and peaceful
surroundings of gentle hills, coconut trees,
mango groves, coffee plantation, eucalyptus
forests, and beautiful cows lift our spirit by
day. We, therefore, ought to realize in Liberia that the environment is not
just a useless jungle with wild animals that can
be exploited and polluted with impunity. The
role of trees and vegetation in air pollution
control cannot be over-emphasized within the
contest of preserving our environment. Trees
perform environmental services that directly
benefit people living mostly in urban areas.
For example, trees can filter up to 80% of
pollutants such as carbon monoxide, sulfur
dioxide, and nitrogen dioxide and a hold soil to
prevent erosion so that we have good top soil to
grow our food to eat. A single mature tree in
Liberian jungle can, therefore, provides enough
oxygen for the needs of ten Liberians annually.
But any alterations to the environment such as
pollution, forest degradation, climate change,
and extreme weather can also change prospects
for health and development as we are seeing
around the world. For the most part, conditions
of the environment can help determine whether or
not people lead longer and healthier lives, as
conditional changes in the environment can
affect reproductive health and lifestyle
choices. Deforestation, on the other hand, is
responsible for higher rainfalls that trigger
mosquito-borne disease outbreaks, increase
flooding (spreading parasitic diseases),
increase the contamination of water supplies
with human or animal wastes and other
environmental pollutants.
Liberia's
environment is no longer that wonderment of
colossal geological formations of God's
creation. The environment in
Liberia is being assaulted
on all fronts daily by unregulated mining and
deforestation activities that if such a trend
continues, a potential extinction of the
treasure trove of species and natural habitats
of Liberia are bound to plunge the
nation into a future environmental nightmare.
For environmental degradation in
Liberia as a result of climate change
will have an adverse impact on the Liberian
people's drinking water and health with the
eventual rise in vector-borne diseases such as
malaria-transmitting mosquitoes. Liberia is home to two of the world’s
most deadly malaria parasites, which have become
very difficult over the years to treat due to
their resistance to insecticides. And sadly Liberia
is also the number one malarial nation in the
world as a result of environmental factors.
In addition, the environmental situation in Liberia has been a source of human
diseases due to the global emergence,
reemergence, and spread of new vector-borne
diseases and old ones such as dengue, yellow
fever, plague, trypanosomiasis and leishmaniasis,
as well as related morbidity and mortality
problems from insects, rodents, and other
parasites. at least 80 percent of diseases in
developing nation like Liberia are caused by
contaminated water, and the situation is even
compounded by the fact that close to 50 percent
of people living on earth lack adequate
sanitation, while 20 percent of freshwater fish
species have been pushed to the edge of
extinction due to contaminated water. Hence all
of our coastal areas will be at risk of flooding
due to sea level rise, especially in densely
populated and low-lying settlements that already
face other challenges such as tropical storms,
including recent tropical storms in Ganta, Monrovia, and other parts of Liberia.
The diet choices we make in Liberia have a direct link between
our survival and our environment, so any
environmental changes in our daily socioeconomic
conditions can lead to early death and related
biotope factors since we as human beings are
connected to the environment by food chains or
food webs. Hence, any ecological damage to the
environment will endanger our national health by
turning parasites into evolutionary land mines
capable of destroying or killing each and every
one of us. Indeed, when the forests are all gone
and rainfall rises above normal levels, the
resultant still water will provide excellent
breeding grounds for mosquitoes and other
vector-diseases. And, according to the World
Health Organization (WHO), an estimated 300
million people worldwide suffer from intense
malaria annually, including annual malarial
deaths in Liberia of 21,500.
Fellow Liberians, global warming gives us added
reason to be jungle lovers. Trees are the most
effective long term way of removing carbon from
the atmosphere. Forests and tree planting are
therefore two avenues for stabilizing human
society in the face of current environmental
challenges in Liberia. Consequently, I think
increased business operations in Liberia are very good for economic recovery and
social stabilization in Liberia, but we should not rush to
every recovery by all means necessary by
overlooking potential harms to our environment.
We must not let a few people and companies ruin
our environment in the name of economic recovery
because we all share the soil, water, air, and
fruits of Liberia. We should also not assume
that all those who come to Liberia from other countries to
exploit our environment will be fair, as there
are no guarantees to anything in this world. We
must seek balance in protecting the environment
of Liberia
by taking initiatives to pass appropriate
legislations and related national policies.
I believe my Liberian brethren that the time has
come for the sleeping giants (the sons and
daughters of
Liberia) to awaken and
proclaim the new Liberia environmental ethic. The time
has come for the church to take steps now to
build an ark in which Biblically informed,
morally responsible people will stand up against
the special interests who are determined to
destroy creation for their own economic gain.
The time has come for the sons and daughters of
the Liberia to stand up and fight against
deforestation, environmental pollution, and
global warming. The time has come for the sons
and daughters of the Liberia to protect
Liberia’s forest and water resources, including
mountains, rivers, streams, oceans and their
inhabitants, trees, forests, minerals, fish,
vegetation, and animals. Will you get on board?
This is my message to you! This is the message
of Liberian Environmental Watch, Liberian EPA,
and related Liberian entities. Let us help to
protect our environment and the natural habitat
of our physical and spiritual selves.
Thanks for listening!