Ghana Integrated Aluminium Development Project in the Atewa Range Forest

Akyem Abuakwa, Ghana

This project violates six Banks and Biodiversity No Go Policy Areas:​

The Ghana Integrated Aluminium Development Project is located in Ghana’s iconic Atewa Range Forest. This project proposes opening up Atewa Forest for bauxite mining. Due to the inherent location of this project, bauxite mining will require destroying swaths of Atewa Forest, which is widely considered Ghana’s “crown jewel”. The Atewa Range Forest is an upland forest ecosystem and one of Ghana’s last remaining intact forests. It is a critical source of water for over five million Ghanaians, and ensuring the integrity of Atewa forest is vital for maintaining healthy watershed functions. However, bauxite mining will likely pollute this vital water source with toxic heavy metals. Atewa Forest is also home to several endemic and critically endangered species such as the White-naped Mangabey and Afia Birago Puddle Frog. Any habitat loss may lead to extinction.

Due to the inherent location of this project, bauxite mining will require destroying swaths of Atewa Forest, which is widely considered Ghana’s “crown jewel”.
©Jeremy Lindsell

Local dissent is strong: forest communities do not want the bauxite mining as it would pollute their water, land, and clean air, and cause loss of livelihoods. Furthermore, project developers have not consulted communities living in the forest. Ghanaian groups are demanding that Atewa Range Forest be excluded from sites targeted for the bauxite mining development project and all project agreements, and for the protection status of Atewa Forest to be upgraded to that of National Park.

The Atewa Forest contains critical habitat for a number of vulnerable and critically endangered species including the rare Atewa Dotted Border butterfly ©Szabolcs Sáfián and the Afia Birago Puddle Frog ©Adam Leaché.

A Rocha Ghana, together with six other civil society organistions and several individual citizens of Ghana, is suing the Ghana Government over its drilling of 53 exploration wells across the Atewa Range Forest and its proposed bauxite mining plans for the forest. The Attorney General responded in September 2020 denying all the key paragraphs in the Statement of Claim. The case is now waiting for a hearing date at Ghana’s High Court of Justice. The President stated in October that plans for mining Atewa Range Forest are far advanced, but lack of information means it is difficult to know the real extent of the project’s progress.  

The A Rocha team are leading a coalition of Ghanaian organizations tryong to save the Atewa Forest from harmful bauxite mining. 
©Jeremy Lindsell

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