Greenpop malawi tea project conserves soil, water and forests
- From
-
Published on
25.08.18
- Impact Area

Despite agriculture accounting for 70 percent of Africa’s annual loss of 2.8 million hectares of forests, the sector is important to engage in halting deforestation and restoring degraded land. Finding common ground to make agriculture work for reforestation and landscape restoration, though, will require systemic adaptation strategies engaging multiple stakeholders.
Read more of Greenpop Malawi tea project conserves soil, water and forests on Landscape News.
Related news
-
Q&A with Marleen Schutter, Post Doctoral Fellow in Aquatic Food Systems
WorldFish07.06.24-
Biodiversity
-
Environmental health
-
Environmental health & biodiversity
This World Oceans Day, we're highlighting the blue economy and its potential to foster sustainable…
Read more -
-
Exploring the Vital Role of Soil Health in Multifunctional Landscapes
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT)30.04.24-
Climate adaptation & mitigation
-
Environmental health
ICRISAT and The Nature Conservancy to Convene Side Event at Africa Fertilizer and Soil Health…
Read more -
-
Soils4Africa workshop: Madagascar youth learn soil information system tools
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)17.04.24-
Environmental health
The goal of the Soils4Africa project is to develop an open-access soil information system and…
Read more -