Just a few years ago, the Sahel region at the northern edge of Senegal was a “barren wasteland” where nothing had grown for 40 years. But the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and local villagers teamed up to regreen the area, bringing back agriculture, improving the economy of the people who live there, and preventing the climate migration that desertification ultimately leads to.

  • DV8@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    But I’m always left wondering why we aren’t supporting these communities with some heavy equipment to do this.

    From the different videos I’ve seen on this it’s also because they are both teaching people to do this themselves and pay them for doing it at the same time. Thus supporting the local economy and sort of kick-starting it. Getting one outsider to do it with a tractor doesn’t create local attachment to this.

      • DV8@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Probably also because there’s more than one community they need to support and there’s only one person who would receive additional income, instead of most in the community. And by teaching all to do it manually and showing the impact. (Which is making more land suitable for sustenance farming)

        And getting local support is always vital to create long lasting success. Using a tractor would probably not guarantee this.

        Then again you might get better answers if you look up some of these videos by organisations covering this. They usually have titles like “turning the dessert green again”

      • belastend@slrpnk.net
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        6 hours ago

        Availability of fuel and spare parts. Using any machinery in desert areas increases their demand for repair. Because sand is nasty.