Ruto: CSs to lead tree planting exercises for next 6 months

He said the exercise will begin on Monday with Prime CS Musalia Mudavadi.

In Summary
  • He said every ministry will have a day in which staff of various departments and agencies will plant trees in the specific areas they have been assigned.
  • "Planting of trees will continue each day beginning next Monday with each ministry participating and so that we have a collective effort in conserving and restoring the environment," Ruto said.
President William Ruto with First Lady Mama Rachel Ruto and a young boy during national tree planting exercise at Kiambicho Forest Karua Hill A, Murang'a County on May 10, 2024.
President William Ruto with First Lady Mama Rachel Ruto and a young boy during national tree planting exercise at Kiambicho Forest Karua Hill A, Murang'a County on May 10, 2024.
Image: PCS

President William Ruto has announced that the tree-planting exercise will continue for the next six months beginning Monday.

Speaking at Karua grounds in Maragua, Murang'a County after planting trees on Friday, Ruto added that Cabinet Secretaries would be at the forefront of the activity.

He said every ministry will have a day in which staff of various departments and agencies will plant trees in the specific areas they have been assigned.

"Planting of trees will continue each day beginning next Monday with each ministry participating so that we have a collective effort in conserving and restoring the environment," Ruto said.

He said Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi will lead the tree-planting exercise this coming Monday.

This, he added, will be followed by all the other ministries until the government achieves the target of 15 billion trees by 2032.

The President regretted that the country has been hit by droughts in the recent past and now floods have wreaked havoc across the country.

He said the government was keen on increasing the country's forest cover from 12 per cent to 30 per cent.

"Climate change is a reality we live with every day. This is why we stopped all other business today to plant trees," Ruto said.

"We must look for a solution to climate change, and the solution is planting and growing trees."

He emphasised the need for every Kenyan to plant at least 50 trees, especially fruit species.

The President observed that planting and growing trees is the solution that will mitigate the effects of climate change, which include devastating droughts and destructive floods.

The government, he explained, set a target for Kenyans to plant 200 million trees across the country.

In attendance was Environment Cabinet Secretary Soipan Tuya who said her ministry will buy seedlings from the residents for future exercises.

On his part, Governor Irungu Kang'ata said his administration will buy mango seedlings from local farmers to increase horticultural production in the area.

Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro commended the initiatives the government is implementing to revive the economy, saying they were yielding fruits.

At the Kiambicho Forest Station, President Ruto, First Lady Rachel Ruto, leaders and residents planted 20,000 trees in a 16-hectare piece of land.

Other leaders present were MPs Chege Njuguna (Kandara), Betty Njeri (Murang’a Women Rep), Mary Wamaua (Maragua), Veronica Maina (nominated), Joseph Munyoro (Kigumo) and Senator Joe Nyutu (Murang’a), among others.

First Lady Mama Rachel Ruto after planting trees at Kiambicho Forest Karua Hill A, Murang'a County on May 10, 2024.
First Lady Mama Rachel Ruto after planting trees at Kiambicho Forest Karua Hill A, Murang'a County on May 10, 2024.
Image: PCS
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