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Home Project Preventing Deforestation, Regenerating the Soil and Sequestering Carbon in the Amazon and Cameroon
United Kingdom

Preventing Deforestation, Regenerating the Soil and Sequestering Carbon in the Amazon and Cameroon

Ecosystem conservation / Education

Teaching agroforestry is one of the greatest solutions to the climate and ecological breakdown. To prevent slash and burn agriculture we must help people in the tropics create fertile soil.

Contact

Rainforest Saver

Info

Available

To sell

Looking

To find volunteers
For investors

Project location

Ecuador, Cameroon

Project description

Inga alley cropping is a sustainable alternative  to  slash and burn farming. The Inga are legumes that fix nitrogen and recycle phosphorus. Inga trees are planted in rows with spaces (alleys) between them. Once grown, the trees cut off light in the alleys which suppresses weeds. The farmer can then prune the trees. Larger branches make firewood or are turned into biochar, while smaller branches and leaves are left to rot on the ground to form a fertile mulch. Crops are then planted. After harvest the trees regrow and the cycle is repeated.

This system of agroforestry prevents deforestation, regenerates the soil, increases yield without the use of agrochemicals and sequesters carbon.

Objectives

Rainforest Saver would like to expand and help more farmers and indigenous communities learn about the benefits of agroforestry.

Impact & Achievements

In the Ecuadorean Amazon we are working with around 150 farmers and 12 indigenous communities. In Cameroon we are working with 250 communities.

The charity has been supporting farmers since 2007.

How can you get involved

We primarily need help to fundraise and spread the word. We are looking for investors who would like to support Rainforest Savers mission to protect the forests and assist those who live there. Together we can make the world a better place.

About the NGO

Rainforest Saver is a UK based charity whose main aim is to prevent tropical deforestation and alleviate poverty by regenerating soil and increasing agricultural yield. Working in the Ecuadorean Amazon and Cameroon we have been able to assist indigenous communities and local people to grow more food without burning patches of forest for short-term fertility (Slash and burn farming), or the use of expensive and toxic agrochemicals. The pollarded wood is also used for cooking or biochar to increase soil productivity. We have had great success through a process of agroforestry called inga alley cropping. Native Inga trees grown in alleys build new soil between them. This fertile soil enables food to be grown where once it was almost impossible. We are a small charity and only pay our local project leaders in each country to work directly with the farmers. We have trained over 120 farmers and 12 indigenous communities in Ecuador, and over 30 villages in Cameroon and it would be wonderful to teach more people. Help us save rainforests, sequester carbon, regenerate soil and reduce hunger. Agroforestry is one of the greatest solutions to the climate and ecological breakdown.

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