analysis of ghana's renewable resource policies
abstract
a comprehensive study of ghana's renewable resource policies has been completed. the study is composed of two major components. first, an examination of environmental degradation occurring in ghana along with the agents and underlying causes responsible. the examination led to the selection of renewable resource policies appropriate for analysis. second, five policies pertaining to ghana’s renewable
resources were analyzed based on their potential effectiveness in mitigating
environmental degradation as well as how effectively the policies were being
implemented in the field.
commercial forestry operations are important to the ghanaian economy. illegal
logging operations are a major factor in ghana, consuming roughly two and a half times
as much wood as the legal annual allowable cut. legal and illegal commercial
operations place considerable stress on ghana’s forest resources; however that stress
pales in comparison to those arising from ghanaian’s heavy dependence on fuelwood as
an energy source and the damaging effects of bushfires. the diminution of the role of
traditional authorities in overseeing forest reserves has weakened control and protection
mechanisms, resulting in degradation and deforestation of many areas. the five policy
documents examined are the forest and wildlife policy of 1994, the timber resources
management act and amendments, the control and prevention of bushfires law, the
national land policy, and the national population policy. overall, ghana’s renewable
resource policy is good; the weaknesses tend to arise with implementing strategies in the
field. the difficulty in transforming ideas on papers to action in the field is often
attributable to weak institutional capacity amongst ghana’s leading institutions and lack
of political will. recommendations are provided as to how to strengthen the protection
of ghana’s renewable resources.
collections
- retrospective theses [1604]