World Vision’s ‘forest-maker’ wins prestigious international award

Highlights

  • Right Livelihood Award also known as the “Alternative Nobel Prize”
  • Since the 1980s, it has been credited with helping restore six million hectares of forest in Niger.
  • Agronomist Tony Rinaudo has spent nearly 40 years working with farmers, helping them drought-proof their land in famine-prone areas.
Humbo, Ethiopia shown in 2006 (left) prior to implementation of Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration and after in 2015 (right).

STOCKHOLM (September 24, 2018) — A humanitarian’s painstaking work to transform desert-like landscapes into thriving forests and farmland, has been hailed a game-changer for combating famine and deforestation.

World Vision’s Tony Rinaudo has won the Right Livelihood Award, also known as the ‘Alternative Nobel Prize’, after more than 35 years working across Asia and Africa.

“Most people don’t realize that protecting the environment can help reduce hunger. Having trees on your land or forests nearby helps improve soil fertility, reduces rain runoff and boosts crop yields,” Rinaudo said.

“They even help mitigate the effects of climate change for some of the world’s poorest, most vulnerable people.”

Rinaudo was travelling in Niger in 1983, when he encountered a dilemma with the tree-planting movement.

“The international community was planting trees, but many of these trees kept dying. They wouldn’t survive the drought, while people were chopping them down because they desperately needed wood for fuel, shelter and to sell,” Rinaudo said.

Rinaudo was in the middle of barren landscape in Niger in 1983, when he made a surprise discovery that there was an existing underground network of tree roots struggling to grow. He realized he could train local farmers to help these trees to grow by educating them about the benefits of trees and teaching them a technique to prune them with a sharp knife.

The simple method is called Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration, also known as FMNR. Since the 1980s, it has been credited with helping restore six million hectares of forest in Niger.

“In these areas, farmers say they’ve been able to double their crop yields and incomes. They’re now producing enough food to feed an extra 2.5 million people a year,” Rinaudo said.

In Humbo, Ethiopia, the green results can literally be seen from space, via satellite images.

Past recipients of the Right Livelihood Award include Syria’s ‘The White Helmets’ and human rights advocate Bianca Jagger.

The award, which is given to four Laureates worldwide each year, recognizes courageous people and organizations offering visionary solutions to the root causes of global problems.

“Tony Rinaudo presents practical solutions to counter desertification, famine and despair. His farmer-managed natural regeneration method has proven to be very successful,” Ole von Uexkull, Executive Director of the Right Livelihood Award Foundation, said.

“If policymakers are ready to support this approach, degraded drylands with an area the combined size of India could be restored.”

Rinaudo and World Vision are now promoting FMNR in 24 countries worldwide.

The Melbourne resident says he hopes more organizations and policymakers will promote and incorporate environmentally sustainable initiatives like FMNR into development work.

“It’s an honor and it’s also exciting to think what this could mean for FMNR,” he said.

“FMNR isn’t a silver bullet, but it definitely has the potential to play a major role in mitigating climate challenges and reducing world hunger.”

About World Vision:
World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization conducting relief, development, and advocacy activities in its work with children, families, and their communities in nearly 100 countries to help them reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. World Vision serves all people regardless of religion, race, ethnicity, or gender. For more information, please visit www.WorldVision.org/media-center/ or on Twitter @WorldVisionUSA.