St. Martin Kaewa Secondary School students emerged winners in greening their school environment and surrounding community
Nairobi, Jan 26th 2016: The Green Initiative Challenge (GIC), an environmental conservation project that aims to green schools and communities around the seven-folk power stations has today treated a school to an educational tour to Mombasa to ingrain in them environmental conservation practices.
St. Martin Kaewa Secondary School students emerged winners in greening their school environment and surrounding community
Nairobi, Jan 26th 2016: The Green Initiative Challenge (GIC), an environmental conservation project that aims to green schools and communities around the seven-folk power stations has today treated a school to an educational tour to Mombasa to ingrain in them environmental conservation practices.
The beneficiaries of the one-week tour of the Mombasa City are thirty students of St. Martin Kaewa Secondary School in Machakos County. The school beat over 80 participating schools in the first phase of Green Iniative Challenge (GIC) to record the highest survival rate of seedlings and use of innovation in growing an impressive a small forest and a woodlot in their school compound.
GIC, a joint programme by KenGen Foundation, Better Globe Forestry and Bamburi Cement, targets schools around the 7-Forks power stations by rallying and empowering schools to participate in environmental activities.
“The winning students are boasting of small forests and woodlots that have changed their school’s environment. Ingraining in them environmental conservation practices will ensure that the country builds a sustainable future,” said Jean-Paul Deprins, Managing Director, Better Globe Forestry.
The GIC Phase 1 was implemented for two years and a total of 81 schools participated with 41 schools from Machakos County and 40 from Embu County. The participating schools planted multi-purpose Cassia siamea (Muveshi) and Melia volkensii (Mukau) tree seedlings for their 0.5acre school plots.
The students will visit Haller Park and Bamburi Nature Trails in Mombasa, which Bamburi Cement Ltd pioneered and transformed from quarry wasteland to a world renowed nature and environmental park, known for its biodiversity in plant and animal species. Today this world class nature and environmental park stands as a beacon on successful decentralization of environmental management to regional and local levels and adaptation of social responsibility
They will also visit Kipevu Power Station, the largest diesel plant in East Africa, and Fort Jesus, one of the main tourist attraction sites in the Coastal city among other scenic places in Mombasa.
“By sponsoring this trip to Mombasa, we want to motivate the students to proactively conserve the environment, not only in their schools but also around their communities,” said Susan Maingi, Bamburi Cement Director of Corporate Affairs, Communications & Sustainable Development.
The GIC project, currently in its second phase is designed as a challenge to participating schools, mainly due to the dry weather conditions in the areas, with prizes awarded based on the highest survival rate of seedlings and use of innovation in environmental management. The best performing schools stand to benefit from education scholarships, infrastructural developments, water tanks, and rainwater-harvesting and cash awards among others.
“We aim to reach up to 140,000 school children by 2018 through GIC project. We are working the schools to reach out to the wider community members and encourage tree planting and nurturing,” said Mike Njeru, Managing Trustee, KenGen Foundation.
With United Nations Environmental Programme’s (UNEP) statistics showing that deforestation deprived Kenya’s economy of approximately 5.8 billion shillings in 2010, the Green initiative Challenge targets to green a total 460 acres with over 300,000 tree seedlings as well as over 100,000fruit seedlings (passion and pawpaw) in approximately 460acres during its second phase.