But according to researchers, the steady population growth and the conversion of savanna into villages and plots for crops, along with growth in incomes has seen fewer people setting fires, in order to protect infrastructure and livelihoods.
A section of burnt Atiak Sugarcane plantation in Atiak Subcounty Amuru District. A study has revealed that air quality in some parts of Sub-Saharan Africa has improved due to decline in seasonal fires
Economic
boom and population increase have often been the biggest contributor to air
pollution due to heavy consumption of fossil fuel by vehicles, industries and
households.
However, a new study on air quality across some parts of
sub-Saharan Africa seems to suggest the opposite as research shows the region
with close to 1.2 billion people is becoming less polluted.
The study published on Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences-PNAS reveals that dangerous nitrogen oxides, byproducts of combustion,
are declining across the north equatorial part of the continent.
This is linked to a decline in the longtime
practice of setting dry-season fires to manage land in areas of study from
Senegal and Ivory Coast in the west, to South Sudan, Uganda and Kenya in the
east. In areas the study was conducted, people live as nomadic herders amid vast
expanses of savanna grasslands and traditionally set fires during the
November-February dry season to clear land for farming, hunting, and
settlement.
But according to researchers, the steady population growth and the conversion
of savanna into villages and plots for crops, along with growth in incomes has
seen fewer people setting fires, in order to protect infrastructure and
livelihoods.
“It’s nice to see a decline occurring when you’d expect to see pollution
increasing,” said the study’s lead author, Jonathan Hickman, a researcher at
the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, an affiliate of Columbia
University’s Earth Institute.
The researchers used satellite imagery to
document trends in burned land and the data captured shows that the fire trend
from 2005 to 2017, saw a 4.5 per cent overall decrease in lower-atmosphere
concentrations of nitrogen oxides during the dry season.
The density of Nitro oxide compounds are considered by many scientists to be a
proxy for overall air quality. They are linked directly to asthma and
premature death and once in the air, they are involved in chemical reactions
that produce an array of other dangerous pollutants, including low-level ozone
and aerosols that can damage both crops and human health.
Hickman however, says that as the population continues to grow and urbanize,
more and more people will almost certainly, be subjected to concentrated urban
pollution, which could reverse the benefits of decreased fires. While some
efforts to expand monitoring of urban air quality are underway, most African
cities don’t currently, even measure air pollution and leave alone
significantly provide to curb it.
Despite the study finding the reduced tendency in biomass burning, in Acholi
Sub-region, in Northern Uganda, the vice is still persisting and at an alarming
rate. Here, bushfires are predominantly set by the locals to hunt for wild
animals, open land and as a result of burning charcoal.
Although no research study has yet been released on the extent of wild bush
fire damage in the region, its visible impacts include the destruction of local
tree species, food crops in gardens, grass-thatched huts and household
properties and to some extent death or injuries of locals.
For instance, in Pader and Agago Districts this month alone, about 18 grass
thatched huts were razed down in Pader and Agengo sub-counties while food crops
and household items worth millions of Shillings were destroyed.
Author Owor, the Founder and Director of the Center for African Research says that
the report is timely and attempts to highlight an issue of growing concern at the time when bush burning continues to be a thorny issue in many rural communities
in Sub-Saharan Africa. He, however,
challenged the research report on the basis that its methodology was more
colonial and doesn’t take into consideration the traditional aspect of bush
burning.
“It does not
highlight the merits of bush burning and the ways the communities especially in
northern Uganda sought to mitigate this factor. Bush burning is a traditional
practice that is cherished by the Acholi. The question is should it be
abolished or not? And what remedies does the report provide in the context of
culture?” Owor told Uganda Radio Network in an interview.
Owor says the report lends support to the whole notion of blaming rural areas
in Africa for emissions at the expense of the more advanced and developed
countries whose emissions are extraordinary high. Air pollution remains one of the largest global health risks and in Sub-Saharan
Africa in particular, air pollution was considered to become the leading cause
of premature death according to 2017 study by researchers at the Earth
Institute Columbia University.
In Uganda, the main sources of air pollution
include emissions from vehicles, industrial activities, biomass fuel use,
burning of waste, and waste management practices.
Bureau Chief, West Acholi