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Tobacco Farms Drive Major Deforestation in Tanzania Source from: Reuters AlertNet 12/27/2012 ![]() Cutting of trees for firewood to cure tobacco over the last few decades has been a major driver of deforestation and worsening extreme weather in Tanzania's central western Tabora region, experts say. Emmanuel Mihambo, a peasant farmer from Usenge village in Tabora has been growing tobacco since the 1980s when his late father acquired a four hectare farm there. Over the years he has watched the forest that once surrounded his village gradually turn into barren ground. "The situation has changed a lot. Imagine that valley separating Usenge and Ntalikwa village used to be covered by a dense forest. You could often spot wild animals such as antelopes. But all the forest is gone," he lamented Today firewood is harder to come by, and a local group calling itself IGEMBE NSABO is urging small-scale farmers to abandon tobacco and turn instead to alternative crops such as sunflower, cotton, groundnut and maize. The group's chairperson, Huruma Mwirombo, told AlertNet that the group has been educating farmers on the environmental fallout from tobacco farming, which has over the years decimated thousands of hectares of Miombo forests, the main source of rainfall in the region. Farmers, however, are reluctant to shun tobacco, the mainstay of the local economy, he said. RELUCTANCE TO SWITCH Although researchers suggest that it would also be economically viable for a peasant farmer to grow other crops that suit the region's conditions – including cotton – Mihambo still feels that tobacco is his best bet and the surest way to feed his family. "I have not tried sunflower or cotton yet. I am not ready to take that risk," he said. Continuing deforestation, however, has contributed to the Tabora region experiencing increasingly acute water shortages in recent years as rainfall dwindles, Mwirombo's group estimates that over of 124,389 cubic metres of trees are being cut in Tabora region every year for tobacco curing. |