The Prince of Wales, Prince Charles has appointed the Okyenhene, Osagyefuo Amoatia Ofori-Panin as a member of the Advisory Council to the Prince's Rainforest Project (PRP).
In a letter signed by Jack Gibb, Project Director of the PRP inviting Osagyefuo to join the Council, he expressed the Prince’s intention to have an “exceptional group of highly influential individuals from the African rainforest countries” as well as senior political officials and prominent members of the business community on the Africa Advisory Council.
The Okyenhene, who is renowned for his passionate advocacy against deforestation and environmental degradation in Ghana, accepted the Prince’s invitation wholeheartedly and expressed optimism that the PRP is exactly what Africa and the rest of the world need to combat global warming.
A statement issued from the office of the Okyenhene in Accra on Monday and signed by the Senior Projects Co-ordinator, Ms Angela Dadson, said the Council draws members from various backgrounds in different countries including DR Congo's Ambassador to South Africa, appointee of the government of Sierra Leone, among other prominent and influential personalities.
Osagyefuo left Accra for Johannesburg, South Africa over the weekend to attend the first meeting of the Council, which started yesterday and is being hosted by Tom Boardman, CEO of Nedbank and Chairman of the PRP Africa Advisory Council.
The PRP is backed by 13 major companies made up of Shell, Rio Tinto Zinc, McDonald’s, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Sun Media, Sky, Deutsche Bank, Man Group, KPMG, Barclays Bank, Finsbury and the European Climate Exchange.
The PRP was set up in October 2007 by Prince Charles to find practical solutions to slow tropical deforestation and combat climate change.
Its main aim is to help the world community recognize the true value of forests by identifying ways to value and then pay for the crucial “ecosystem services” that rainforests provide.
The PRP is engaging rainforest nations, governments, businesses and non-governmental organizations to find solutions to deforestation.
Source: Daily Guide
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Developing countries need $1 trillion annually by 2030 to combat climate change, new report warns
1 hour -
NALAG elect Alfred Aseidu Adjei as new president
2 hours -
If I focused on self-promotion, my statues would be everywhere – Mahama
2 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Nsoatreman draw 1-1 against Aduana in Bono derby
2 hours -
Don’t be used for electoral misconduct, you would be dealt with – IGP warns
2 hours -
Prof Ato Duncan to launch blueprint for sustainable global peace
4 hours -
Southwest flight struck by bullet at Texas airport
4 hours -
Malcolm X’s family sues FBI, CIA and NYPD over his murder
4 hours -
BCI takes free breast cancer screening to Mampong Okuapeman
5 hours -
Measuring the Green Wealth of Nations: Natural capital and economic productivity in Africa
5 hours -
COP29 protest: Global call for plant-based treaty gains momentum
5 hours -
We drew EC’s attention to Ahafo, Volta ballot papers anomalies – NDC
6 hours -
Supreme Court steadily chipping away at Parliament, breaching separation of powers – Tony Aidoo
6 hours -
‘I sold my car and land to organize Ghana’s biggest boxing bout’ – Alex Ntiamoah
6 hours -
We can build a judiciary system that is truly citizen-centred – Chief Justice
6 hours