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PLANET EARTH:OUR LOVING HOME
Kenya: Experiencing an Acute Crisis Due to Global Warming
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Caring viewers,
welcome to Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
where we will present
excerpts from
our interview with
Mr. Shem Otoi Sam,
program officer for
the Kenya Youth
Development Trust,
regarding the major
challenges Kenya faces
in relation to
climate change.
The current climate
change situation in Africa
is not good.
For example,
as we’ve learned, this
serious change in Kenya
epitomizes
every other country
in Africa both north of
the Sahara (Desert) and
down south of Limpopo
(South Africa);
it’s uniform.
And it’s a concern for us
Africans as you know,
that Africa basically
relies on agriculture,
an agrarian system.
With climatic change,
most Africans
do not have the capacity
to adapt with
the climatic change.
Some of the crops that
they grow commercially or
for subsistence purposes
may not survive
during climate change.
So it’s a dire situation
in Africa.
A lot of factors have
led to global warming,
because of reduced forest
cover the plants do not
absorb enough carbon,
so these gases end up
heating our environment.
And we might as well
add the livestock factor
because we know that
a cow produces
as much carbon as a car.
So because of
the livestock, it also
increases the amount of
greenhouse gases
in the environment.
So actually man’s activity,
especially in
growing livestock and
our manufacture industry
has led to
global warming.
The Trust is a youth-led
non-governmental
organization that promotes
environmental protection,
social justice and
youth empowerment.
Mr. Sam majored in
environmental chemistry
at the Jomo Kenyatta
University of Agriculture
and Technology
in Nairobi, Kenya.
Kenya Youth
Development Trust
currently is trying to
conserve our environment,
especially the Mau
water catchment area.
Mau is the main water
catchment area in Kenya
and all of the rivers
in Kenya flow from Mau.
So we are planting trees,
mobilizing young people
to plant trees in the Mau
in order to preserve
our water.
Kenya is regarded as
the center of East Africa
in terms of politics,
economics and culture.
The nation’s many
magnificent national parks,
havens for wild animals,
are adored by tourists
around the world.
But even this beautiful
country is not exempt
from the devastating
impacts of global warming.
The country’s
eastern shoreline
is extremely vulnerable
to sea-level rise.
With a rise of
only 30 centimeters, 17%
of Mombasa, Kenya’s
second largest city,
is expected to
become submerged.
From 1960 to 2003,
Kenya’s mean temperature
gradually rose
one degree Celsius.
And the resulting
drying trend has had
a huge effect
on the entire nation.
For example,
the country’s mountain
glaciers are melting faster
than ever.
I’ve been to
Mt. Kilimanjaro once.
That was in 2003
when I was a student.
The ice cap, the area
covered by the ice on
Mt. Kilimanjaro’s peak
was around
five square kilometers.
Today it’s less than that
five square kilometers
and it’s projected that
maybe in the next
10 or 20 years
there might be no ice
on top of Mt. Kilimanjaro.
We know it’s because of
global warming.
There’re some parts in
Kenya that were formerly
covered by vegetation.
Due to drastic change
in climatic conditions,
some vegetation
has now disappeared.
So when it rains,
water is flowing down
the lowlands, sweeping
everything with it.
So the rain has been
a big cause of flooding.
In other areas
we have drought because
some forest cover
has been cleared.
So there’s a reduction
in water catchment.
“The Great Migration”
is an annual
1,000-kilometer journey
in which two-million
wildebeest, zebras and
gazelles move clockwise
through the Serengeti
region in Tanzania
and the Maasai Mara
National Reserve in Kenya.
The main reason for
this massive movement
of animals is water
and pasture scarcity.
Remember the migration
of animals at Serengeti
was declared one of
the wonders of the world
because large herds of
animals migrate, but
it isn’t as magnificent
as it had been because of
reduction in water level
in the river.
The water level went low.
So most animals
migrated into Tanzania
and have not come back.
It has really affected
the migration of
the wildebeest in Maasai
Mara and Serengeti.
The animals depend on
the pasture.
When there is very little
pasture, they move to
where they can get
a lot of pasture.
But as observed, the
reduction of forest cover
in the Mau
there was little pasture in
Maasai Mara, Serengeti
and maybe Amboseli
(National Park) also.
That’s why the migration
isn’t as spectacular
as it used to be before.
There are fears that
Lake Victoria, Africa’s
largest lake
and the lifeline of
30-million people,
may eventually dry up
due to droughts and
significant evaporation
accelerated by
global warming.
The lake’s water level
has dropped a staggering
11 meters, and
substantial biodiversity
loss is occurring.
I grew up along
Lake (Victoria).
I come from Kendu Bay.
There used to be a lot of
catfish and mudfish.
It has changed.
One of the reasons
why it has changed, the
temperature of the water
has changed, which does
not favor breeding of fish.
The migration of
the Intertropical
Convergence Zone, or
the area around the Earth
near the equator
where winds from the
Northern and Southern
hemispheres
come together, affects
precipitation patterns
in Kenya.
The country’s
rainy season is divided
into two periods.
The so-called “short” rains
come between
October and December,
and the “long” rains
between March and May.
During these times,
the rate of precipitation is
normally approximately
50 – 200 millimeters
a month.
Recently, however,
the short rain season has
been lasting longer,
while the long rain season
has been getting
shorter and weaker.
Statistics show that
since the mid-1970s
a decrease of over 100
millimeters of rainfall
has occurred
in the long rain season.
We should start
with Nairobi, which is
the capital city of Kenya.
It’s always raining here
in Nairobi but as you can
see, it’s very dry
and it’s not raining.
In other parts,
the Rift Valley Province,
especially Uasin Gishu
(district) which is
Kenya’s breadbasket.
They always do
their planting in March.
It didn’t rain in March.
They’re actually planting
now in April.
That shows how much
climate has changed
in Kenya,
and the rain patterns
have also changed.
In some parts of Kenya
like, (the) northeastern
(area), it’s a dry area
but this time it’s drier.
It actually took five years
before rains fell,
so it’s very dry.
Global warming-induced
droughts and desertification
have decimated
Kenya’s crop yields,
particularly in the north.
The short rains did not
come between October
and December 2010 and
the long rains (March
through May 2011)
were sparse.
The lack of
sufficient precipitation
has thus severely affected
Kenya’s food security.
As of October 2011,
East Africa is being
affected by the most
severe food crisis of
the 21st century due to
the region’s worst
drought in 60 years.
Among the 1.2-million
undernourished children
in Somalia, Kenya and
Ethiopia, 400,000 are
at risk of dying.
Up to 3.5 million Kenyans,
mostly in the north,
are going hungry.
In Kenya, especially
for the last three years,
we’ve been experiencing
drastic food shortages in
arid and semi-arid areas
as well as those
very, very drier patches
all over the country.
Because all those years
there have been
low crop yields due to
environmental factors
and climate change,
so the food that was
harvested by farmers
wasn’t sufficient
to feed the population.
So mostly,
like in 2008-2009, Kenya
decided to import maize
to feed the people of Kenya.
Even the National Cereal
Produce Board that is
concerned with keeping
extra surplus grains
didn’t have all that maize
to feed the people.
Even today we have
a seed shortage.
We don’t have enough
seeds in the country
for the farmers.
The prices of
basic commodities have
a direct correlation
with the food shortage.
Basic commodities, rice,
maize flour, wheat flour
have gone up, sugar cane
has also gone up.
So it has a direct
correlation with
the change in the climate.
Forests play
a tremendous role
in absorbing atmospheric
carbon dioxide,
but deforestation not only
erases these invaluable
carbon sinks, but also
releases stored CO2
back into the air.
We must also have
a responsible citizenry.
I would recommend that
every citizen,
where possible,
they try to grow trees,
use safe and clean energy.
You (should) also try to
use public transport as
opposed to personal cars.
According to the
US-based non-profit
Rodale Institute,
which conducts organic
agriculture research,
organic farming uses
45% less energy
and even less water
than conventional
farming methods.
I would really encourage
people to go
the organic vegan way.
I will just give you
a small example.
In Rift Valley, which is
the food basket of Kenya,
they use
an inorganic fertilizer,
and when rain falls
this inorganic fertilizer
is swept down into
the main water system.
This not only totally
affects aquatic life,
but it also affects
the human being.
The other bit of this
is why must people
consume meat
when it’s so deadly?
People should adapt to
the vegan lifestyle,
which is very healthy,
and (assures)
low cholesterol in the body.
The people will live long
and the environment
will be much friendlier.
We’ve done
a lot of research
with young people,
especially in agriculture.
We have a program
in Kenya Youth
Development Trust that
deals with economic
empowerment
for young people.
We encourage
the young people
to practice agro-forestry.
That way they can have
their food, they can grow
tomatoes, vegetables
and also plant trees. .
So we’ve also done
research on where
we can grow what crop;
for example some parts
of Nyanza (Province)
can do well in production
of pineapples
An organic vegan diet
can quickly reduce
greenhouse gas emissions
in the atmosphere and
also reverse the world’s
food and water crises.
May all Kenyans, and
indeed the whole world,
soon become aware of
the severe environmental
impact of
the livestock industry,
quickly adopt the humane,
plant-based diet, and thus
end climate change.
Our sincere thanks
Mr. Shem Otoi Sam
for sharing your insights
on the detrimental effects
of climate change
on Kenya and
informing us of some of
the constructive steps
that the Kenya Youth
Development Trust
is taking to remedy
the situation.
For more information
on the Kenya Youth
Development Trust,
please visit
www.KeyDeT.org
Attentive viewers,
thank you for joining us
on Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home.
May we always take
excellent, compassionate
care of the environment.
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