Share

Facebook icon Twitter icon Mail icon
Part One of a Series About Empowering Women in Ivory Coast
Part One of a Series About Empowering Women in Ivory Coast
News Jul 13, 2022

Encouraging Ivorian Women to Protect Forests and Build Resilience

3-minute read

In Ivory Coast, Earthworm Foundation is working with rural communities, particularly the wives of cocoa and rubber farmers living near forests reserves in Cavally.

Their contribution is at the heart of work to promote healthy forests and prosperous communities. The aim is to empower them and their spouses to take ownership of forest conservation by developing income-generating activities that do not harm forests.

The women's group in Zagné-Djirahi. Photo courtesy of Antoine Resk Diomandé.
The women's group in Bocanda 2. Photo courtesy of Antoine Resk Diomandé.

Helping develop income-generating activities

The Cavally Forest Reserve is located in the Cavally region, in western Ivory Coast. This forest spans across 67,593 hectares and is home to endangered species such as chimpanzees and pygmy hippopotami. The baseline map of the forest – developed in 2018 with Airbus through the Starling satellite monitoring platform – showed that more than 40 percent of this forest is degraded.

In July 2020, Earthworm Foundation began partnering with Nestlé, the Ivorian Ministry of Water and Forests (MINEF) and the Ivorian forest agency (SODEFOR) to conserve and restore the Cavally Forest, as well as develop the resilience of surrounding communities. Women play an important role in this project and have formed two groups in Bocanda 2 and Zagné-Djirahi. These women's groups are in charge of producing tree seedlings to reforest degraded areas.

Farmers and the field team inspect the plant nursery, from which reforestation begins. Photo courtesy of Antoine Resk Diomandé.
Saplings at the plant nursery. Photo courtesy of Antoine Resk Diomandé.

"The Bocanda 2 women's group is made up of 30 people, including two men. In 2022, we signed a contract with them to produce 10,000 seedlings for reforestation. In addition to theoretical and practical training in seedling production, they can sell seedlings for 170 CFA francs each – 70 CFA francs for seedling production and 100 CFA francs as profit," said Elie Soungalo, Earthworm Foundation field officer.

The profits from this enables the women to develop other sources of income in parallel.

"Before, we thought that it was only cocoa or rubber that would earn us money. Earthworm helped us get together to develop other activities. With profits from the seedlings, we bought equipment to grow aubergine," said Kouamé Amenan Suzanne, President of the Bocanda 2 women's group.

With profits from the seedlings, farmers bought equipment to grow aubergine. Photo courtesy of Antoine Resk Diomandé.

At the Zagné-Djirahi women's group, they are trying to grow and market snails.

In the Cavally region, snails are prized by the population. Photo courtesy of Antoine Resk Diomandé.
Snails sold at a local market. Photo courtesy of Rini Vella-Gangnè.
"In the Cavally region, snails are prized by the population. Unfortunately, the collection of snails in plantations and protected areas does not satisfy consumers. This is why the women have decided to start producing and marketing snails with the income from the tree seedlings," explains Soumayla Kané, Earthworm Foundation field officer.

--------------------

If you would like to read Part Two of this series, click here.

You might be interested in...

Nov 16, 2023

Nestlé and Earthworm Foundation Improving Recruitment Practices in Malaysian Pulp and Paper Supply Chains

Aug 18, 2023

Earthworm foundation collaborates with leading brands to boost sustainable agriculture in Indonesia

Jan 23, 2024

Key to responsible forest management lies in local dialogue and close collaboration with the whole value chain