The Prague Post - Chad hopes 'green charcoal' can save vanishing forests

EUR -
AED 4.231851
AFN 81.24019
ALL 98.584644
AMD 443.441913
ANG 2.0623
AOA 1056.719257
ARS 1341.976745
AUD 1.776506
AWG 2.074259
AZN 1.964368
BAM 1.962631
BBD 2.32457
BDT 140.810099
BGN 1.955726
BHD 0.434748
BIF 3389.10807
BMD 1.152366
BND 1.483386
BOB 7.984583
BRL 6.328452
BSD 1.151347
BTN 99.868131
BWP 15.527235
BYN 3.767818
BYR 22586.371358
BZD 2.312629
CAD 1.578488
CDF 3315.356832
CHF 0.940866
CLF 0.02826
CLP 1084.469033
CNY 8.28378
CNH 8.276632
COP 4705.109911
CRC 581.518969
CUC 1.152366
CUP 30.537696
CVE 110.771166
CZK 24.796569
DJF 204.79825
DKK 7.459535
DOP 68.392504
DZD 150.396468
EGP 58.402713
ERN 17.285488
ETB 155.626707
FJD 2.595476
FKP 0.855538
GBP 0.854894
GEL 3.134663
GGP 0.855538
GHS 11.869096
GIP 0.855538
GMD 82.401438
GNF 9974.87964
GTQ 8.849648
GYD 240.880038
HKD 9.046015
HNL 30.134884
HRK 7.532552
HTG 150.997695
HUF 403.087789
IDR 18916.431722
ILS 4.017666
IMP 0.855538
INR 99.803528
IQD 1509.59931
IRR 48543.41368
ISK 142.605293
JEP 0.855538
JMD 183.649643
JOD 0.817061
JPY 167.587392
KES 148.882294
KGS 100.774076
KHR 4632.511006
KMF 492.65201
KPW 1037.138507
KRW 1574.373893
KWD 0.352912
KYD 0.95949
KZT 599.31475
LAK 24862.293541
LBP 103251.983255
LKR 346.131731
LRD 230.070318
LSL 20.650655
LTL 3.402637
LVL 0.697054
LYD 6.245707
MAD 10.553946
MDL 19.854415
MGA 5110.742525
MKD 61.516506
MMK 2419.052624
MNT 4131.864636
MOP 9.309722
MRU 45.771615
MUR 52.570598
MVR 17.752174
MWK 2000.506979
MXN 21.924105
MYR 4.903893
MZN 73.705533
NAD 20.650959
NGN 1784.311808
NIO 42.407185
NOK 11.542325
NPR 159.785826
NZD 1.919732
OMR 0.443077
PAB 1.151347
PEN 4.144484
PGK 4.743092
PHP 65.96031
PKR 326.753565
PLN 4.275051
PYG 9189.826303
QAR 4.195188
RON 5.029617
RSD 117.229026
RUB 89.999011
RWF 1642.121387
SAR 4.324354
SBD 9.611225
SCR 16.909959
SDG 691.993063
SEK 11.071366
SGD 1.480174
SHP 0.905579
SLE 25.870032
SLL 24164.540661
SOS 658.563654
SRD 44.769129
STD 23851.647215
SVC 10.074063
SYP 14983.359829
SZL 20.673687
THB 37.836205
TJS 11.397978
TMT 4.033281
TND 3.386231
TOP 2.698955
TRY 45.70292
TTD 7.824165
TWD 34.024733
TZS 3032.211168
UAH 48.075828
UGX 4150.409759
USD 1.152366
UYU 47.103538
UZS 14588.95166
VES 118.182844
VND 30115.930055
VUV 138.355997
WST 3.046568
XAF 658.213685
XAG 0.032319
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.114326
XDR 0.817404
XOF 658.575223
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.681205
ZAR 20.750935
ZMK 10372.669767
ZMW 26.970169
ZWL 371.061345
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Chad hopes 'green charcoal' can save vanishing forests
Chad hopes 'green charcoal' can save vanishing forests / Photo: Joris Bolomey - AFP

Chad hopes 'green charcoal' can save vanishing forests

As they zigzagged from one machine to another in the searing African sun, the workers were covered in black soot.

Text size:

But the charcoal they were making is known as "green", and backers hope it can save impoverished Chad from rampant deforestation.

Chad, a vast, landlocked country of 19 million people perched at the crossroads of north and central Africa, is steadily turning to desert.

It has lost more than 90 percent of its forest cover since the 1970s, hit by climate change and overexploitation of trees for household uses such as cooking, officials say.

"Green charcoal" aims to protect what forest is left.

Made from discarded plant waste such as millet and sesame stalks or palm fronds, it is meant to save trees from being chopped down for cooking.

The product "releases less emissions than traditional charcoal, it doesn't blacken your pots, it has high energy content and lasts up to three times longer than ordinary charcoal," said Ousmane Alhadj Oumarou, technical director of the Raikina Association for Socioeconomic Development (Adser).

"Using one kilogramme of green charcoal saves six kilogrammes of wood."

The group has installed a production facility in Pont Belile, just north of the capital, N'Djamena.

There, workers grind up burnt plant waste, then mix it with gum arabic, which helps it ignite, and clay, which makes it burn more slowly.

The resulting black nuggets look like ordinary charcoal.

Like the traditional kind, it emits CO2 when it burns -- but less, said Souleymane Adam Adey, an ecologist at the University of N'Djamena.

And "it contributes to fighting deforestation, by ensuring the trees that aren't cut down continue to capture and store carbon," he said.

- Refugee pressure -

The conflict in neighbouring Sudan, which is facing one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world, is adding to pressure on Chad, which has become home to more than 800,000 Sudanese refugees since 2023 -- double the 400,000 it already hosted.

"Desertification has progressed in the regions that have been hosting Sudanese refugees for the past two years," said Adser's director, 45-year-old businessman Ismael Hamid.

Adser invested 200 million CFA francs (about $350,000) to launch the project, then won backing from the World Bank, which buys the charcoal for 750 CFA francs per kilogramme.

The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, distributes the charcoal in refugee camps in eastern Chad.

But Hamid said he hoped to expand production and slash prices to 350 to 500 CFA francs per kilo to make "green charcoal" available and affordable nationwide.

The plant currently produces seven to nine tonnes per day.

"If we want to meet the country's needs, we have to increase our output by at least a factor of 10," said Hamid, calling for subsidies to support the budding sector.

Environment Minister Hassan Bakhit Djamous told AFP the government was working on a policy to promote such projects.

"We need to bet on green charcoal as an energy source for the future of our country," he said.

S.Janousek--TPP