Perma Atlas Initiative

Home to 1200 people and with an altitude of 1800 m, the low Atlas Mountain area in Morocco is very dry and arid, with little to no trees outside of the river valleys. In recent years, climate change has brought prolonged periods of drought, flooding, and erosion of mountain slopes which have severely impacted the land. Soil fertility has declined, and the landscape has become extremely dry and degraded – partly as a result of implementing unsustainable agricultural techniques. Unpredictable rainfall and intense droughts have created problems such as soil erosion, landslides, and a reduction in healthy and productive land for agriculture.

Perma Atlas

In 2014, the village of Angulez – located in the Ounila Valley of the Atlas Mountains – experienced some devastating floods that further damaged farmlands and degraded the landscape. This, in turn, is driving the youth away from this region to pursue more stable futures in bigger urban parts of the country. The Perma Atlas project is working to restore and recover the valley and slopes back to their greener form by engaging local communities and farmers, providing them with techniques to sustainably restore this mountainous biome. By reintroducing techniques such as permaculture and sustainable land management practices, the project aims to regenerate and recover the High Atlas Mountains’ ecosystem. Through teaching project participants and community members how to implement interventions such as kitchen gardens, gabions, and swales, local communities learn how to work with nature, rather than against it, in order to restore their lands.

The Greener.Land team connected with Latifa Oumlil – the project leader – and flew out to learn more about the Perma Atlas project and to film the progress and experiences of local community members in restoring the Ounila Valley. The Greener.Land team met with Latifa and Khalid Hmittou, the videographer, and drove to the Atlas mountains. Over 5 days, they met with villagers, filmed the landscape, conducted interviews, and documented the implementation of different regenerative interventions. To see what the Perma Atlas project is doing to regreen the land of Ounila Valley, check out the videos on this page!

If you want to learn more about the interventions you have seen practiced in these videos, check out the intervention pages for Kitchen Gardens, Gabions, and Swales!

Location: Anguelz, Telouet, Atlas Mountains, Morocco

Regreening Murcia

Restoring degraded farmland in Murcia, Spain

Iris van der Horst and Remko Schouten bought a large part of land together in Murcia, Spain with the intention to restore the health of the land and regreen the area, alongside their team of regreening experts. These experts are: Cedrick Gijsbertsen and Lucas Borst.

Murcia is an increasingly arid region in Southern Spain. Up to 90% of land in this area is at high risk of degradation of natural ecosystems and desertification. Climate change has exacerbated drought conditions and led to a reduction in annual rainfall. This has increased erosion, leading to losses in soil fertility, and a decline in the ability of native vegetation to thrive.

Over the course of the next years, the team plan to work on restoring the health of the soils and the overall landscape. They will film their progress and the challenges they face, and these videos will be shared on the Greener.Land platform. The team aims to document the different interventions they will try out on the land, to see how the landscape responds.

The group first flew out to begin documenting this process in January 2023. They have returned a number of times since to get the project moving and begin their journey to restoring their landscape!

Stay tuned for videos from Regreening Murcia!

Kuku Group Ranch

Nestled between the Rombo and Mbririkani Ranches, the Kuku Group Ranch is a savannah landscape and critical wildlife corridor between the Amboseli and Tsavo National Parks. The area is home to more than 29,000 Maasai people. In recent years, the Kuku ranch’s population has grown exponentially, at the same time, the area is increasingly affected by unpredictable rainfall and decreasing topsoil quality due to climate change. Some parts of the region now only receive 400 mm of rainfall annually. These factors have led to increasingly rapid erosion and degradation of pasturelands for the Maasai community to live and farm on. Consequently, agricultural and livestock productivity have decreased dramatically, affecting many Maasai livelihoods across the savannah landscape. Historic overgrazing of the land by cattle coupled with the effects of climate change are drying up the land and reducing its productive capacity, causing water and food scarcity, increasing poverty, and leading to a loss of biodiversity.

The Kuku Group Ranch is undertaking a project alongside Justdiggit that aims to regenerate and revitalize the land to bring it back to its productive and functional former self, to safeguard the livelihoods of the Maasai community and allow them to realize environmental benefits of the land. A number of different interventions are being implemented on the ranch that will improve soil health, prevent erosion, and increase water retention. Grazing management (Olopololi), stone lines, and, most importantly, water bund interventions are being practiced in the community. These interventions are especially helpful in retaining rainwater, allowing it to seep into the soil rather than being washed away. Grass seed banks are also being constructed on the ranch, after an initial pilot study was conducted in the Moilo area wherein 15 acres of pastureland was fenced off to serve the local community. As part of the East African Hydrologic Corridor, a total of 150,000 semi-circular bunds – or ‘rainwater harvesting bunds’ – and 5 grass seed banks are being dug. This will contribute to the regreening of 1077 ha of degraded land and the restoration of vegetation across the Kuku Group Ranch.

This project is providing local communities with employment, as many local Maasai are involved in the digging of bunds and creation and management of stone lines and grass seed banks. This has provided many Maasai families with a source of income and has enabled them to send their children to school. The 5 grass seed banks are currently managed and maintained by ~90 Maasai women. These women are responsible for growing, harvesting, and selling the grass/hay seeds of these banks, providing an additional economic opportunity for the community. The grasses create a green oasis on degraded pasturelands, and surplus hay can be harvested and used as fodder for livestock in dry seasons. Furthermore, as part of the grazing management plan designed collaboratively by Justdiggit, the Maasai, and local partners, community rangers were hired to guard restored areas and the surrounding lands. This has provided additional opportunities for the local community. 

If you want to learn more about the interventions you have seen practiced in these videos, check out the intervention pages for Grazing Management, Stone Lines, Grass Seed Banks, and Semi-Circular Bunds!

Location: Kuku, Kajiado County, Kenya