Bungu: Growing Resilience Through Agroforestry in Korogwe 

Bungu: Growing Resilience Through Agroforestry in Korogwe

In Bungu Ward, Korogwe District, smallholder farmers are at the heart of a powerful transformation. As part of the Forest Focus Plant to Stop Poverty (PSP) initiative, 60,000 agroforestry trees were distributed and planted directly on farmers’ fields in December 2024, working alongside existing crops rather than replacing them.

Agroforestry Supporting Smallholder Farmers In Bungu

Spanning 44 square kilometres, the project integrates fruit and multipurpose trees such as jackfruit, passion fruit, papaya, lemon, avocado, mango, and guava into everyday farming systems. These trees improve soil fertility, reduce erosion, provide fodder, and generate new income streams through fruit and tree products.


The project brought together 11 villages, representing 185 families, and created 45 local jobs in planting, transport, and logistics.

Training And Long-Term Resilience

Beyond the trees themselves, farmers gained access to training in sustainable land management, strengthening long-term resilience in a region facing deforestation, water scarcity, and high poverty rates.

Restoring Land And Livelihoods Together

Bungu’s agroforestry journey shows how restoring land and livelihoods can go hand in hand.

Impact

GiftTrees is FREE

GiftTrees simply adds a small amount to your diner's bill. This low addition guarantees the planting of a life-changing GiftTree in a developing country.

Your diners can choose to remove this from their bill should they wish and as a restaurant there is zero-cost for becoming a certified GiftTrees Restaurant.

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