Accra, June 30, GNA-Farmers, local authorities, and businesses across Ghana in 2025, positioned the country as one of the strongest examples of regenerative agriculture in action, according to the Rainforest Alliance’s newly released 2025 Annual Report, Regeneration Takes Root.
According to the report, farmers, local authorities and businesses in Ghana, planted 1.3 million trees in 2025, bringing more than 181,000 hectares of cocoa-growing landscapes under sustainable management.
In a statement issued by the Rainfall Alliance and copied to the Ghana News Agency said the achievements were delivered through the Rainforest Alliance’s EU LEAN project, which brought farmers, local government, and private companies together through eight landscape management boards to coordinate restoration efforts across cocoa-growing communities.
It said the initiative reflected a growing shift beyond conserving natural resources toward actively restoring degraded landscapes while strengthening rural livelihoods.
“Protecting nature remains essential, but the future also depends on our ability to regenerate it. Across Ghana, we are seeing what regeneration looks like in practice: healthier soils, trees returning to farms, landscapes managed collectively, and communities taking a leading role in shaping a more resilient future. What gives us hope is seeing farmers and communities not only adapt to change but actively shape it,” Mr Nicholas Jengre, Country Director of Rainforest Alliance Ghana said
It said Ghana’s progress was one of several examples highlighted in the Rainforest Alliance’s 2025 Annual Report, which documented how regenerative agriculture and landscape restoration were improving both ecosystems and farmer livelihoods across West and Central Africa.
It noted that in neighbouring Côte d’Ivoire, where cocoa provided the main source of income for millions of households, nearly 87 percent of cocoa-producing families still earned below living income benchmarks.
The statement said though the Hershey Income Accelerator Program (HIAP), implemented with technical partners, participating farmers were building more productive and resilient farms.
It noted that by 2025, 89 percent had completed the first year of their Farm Enterprise Plans, while HIAP demonstration plots produced approximately 34 percent more cocoa pods per 20 trees than comparable farms outside the programme.
Meanwhile, in Cameroon’s Western Highlands, communities worked with the Rainforest Alliance between 2020 and 2025 to restore sacred forests threatened by deforestation and land degradation. The project established eight community nurseries, planted nearly 80,000 trees, and restored more than 3,000 hectares of degraded land.
“Climate change is not imaginary, it’s real,” “We all need to adapt, protect the forest, focus on the land we already have, and apply good practices. That is how we will increase yields, attract partners, and secure our future,” said Jean Louis Mva Ze, a cocoa farmer and cooperative president from Cameroon.
It said the regional initiatives contributed to a broader global effort outlined in the report. Across 80 landscape and community programmes and certification activities in 64 countries, the Rainforest Alliance reported helping protect or restore 11.9 million hectares of ecosystems, avoiding or sequestering 5.5 million metric tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions, and contributing US$2.22 billion in additional farm income through higher yields and sustainability premiums.
More than 10.8 million farmers and workers also received information on their rights and responsibilities during the year, it said.
The report comes as agriculture continues to account for an estimated 80 percent of tropical deforestation globally, while climate change is projected to reduce agricultural production by as much as 35 percent by 2050.
Against that backdrop, the Rainforest Alliance said, “the 2025 marked an important milestone with the launch of its new Regenerative Agriculture Standard—a science-based framework comprising 119 requirements covering soil health, biodiversity, water stewardship, climate resilience, and social outcomes”.
“Last year showed us what’s possible when farmers are supported, and companies move beyond compliance toward regenerative investments,” said Santiago Gowland, CEO of the Rainforest Alliance.
“Accelerating regenerative agriculture comes down to trust, and trust is earned with credible, demonstrable evidence. Our new Regenerative Agriculture Standard ensures impact on soil, biodiversity and livelihoods is measured and verified, not just claimed.”
It noted that while highlighting measurable progress, the Rainforest Alliance was scaling regenerative agriculture to require sustained investment from governments, businesses, and financial institutions to support farmers and communities leading the transition to healthier, more resilient landscapes.
The report noted that Rainforest Alliance Certified products were now available in 172 countries across more than 66,000 products, reflecting growing market demand for responsibly produced commodities.
GNA
Edited by Linda Asante Agyei