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ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS-DTB partners with KTDA Foundation to plant 10,000 trees in a bid to conserve the environment;

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BRIAN JAYSINS-OXYGEN PR;

Diamond Trust Bank (DTB) has partnered with the Kenya Tea Development Agency (KTDA) foundation to plant 10,000 indigenous trees in Kapkamo catchment area within Cherang’any Hills, one of Kenya’s main water towers in Trans Nzoia County during the World Environment Day on Monday.

From left to right KTDA Foundation’s Alice Kyalo, DTB-Sustainability’s Elly Oduk, DTB’s
Mantui Turgo, and FSC-Kapsara Tea Factory’s Ombati Douglas during the exercise.Photo by Brian Jaysins, Oxygen PR;

Under this partnership, 302 farmers drawn from Kapkongor, Kapchemakwer and Mogotu villages, will plant the saplings in their farms, as part of ongoing efforts to rehabilitate and restore this strategic environmental national asset.

This investment is aligned to the ‘MuchMoreThanTrees’ initiative through which DTB plans to plant and grow more than 10 million trees by 2030.

From left to right Mary Kemei, Beatrice Oluoch and Pauline Kosgey during the exercise. Photo by Brian Jasins, Oxygen PR.

The Bank has so far planted and grown over 1 million trees since 2018.

DTB’s tree planting and growing exercise resonates with the Government’s commitment to plant 1.5 billion trees by 2032 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, stop and reverse deforestation, and restore 5.1 million hectares of degraded landscapes.

Branch Manager DTB Bungoma Graham Iravunga (left) with Kapsara Tea Factory Unit manager Winston Njeru during the exercise. Photo by Brian Jaysins, Oxygen PR;

Speaking on the partnership, DTB Group Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Managing Director, Nasim Devji noted that Environmental risks and climate change have continued to threaten our ecosystem, which calls for the acceleration of practical mitigation measures, to reverse their increasingly adverse effects.

DTB Senior Business Officer David Opana (left) with KTDA
Foundation’s Alice Kyalo (middle) and DTB Business Officer Rose Makokha (right) during the exercise. Photo by Brian Jaysins.

“This year, we have elected to work directly with farmers because we recognize that for this exercise to achieve its intended outcomes, we must domicile ownership of rehabilitation efforts with affected communities. We are therefore committed to working with communities, institutions, and the Government to promote environmental conservation,” she added.

As part of DTB’s corporate volunteering initiative, over a dozen employees from the Bank’s head office, Kitale and Eldoret branches  and  hundreds of Locals participated in the tree planting and growing activity.

ENDS;

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