The farming secret that’s quietly bringing dead land back to life

Author: Murat Gungor, Website and Online Strategy Consultant   |   March 19, 2026

James Amponsah

Photo credit: UNCCD/G20 Global Land Inititative

In this episode of Land Talks by the G20 Global Land Initiative, we speak with James Amponsah, Research Scientist at the Forestry Research Institute of Ghana, about innovative silvopastoral systems, landscape restoration, and farmer-led solutions in Northern Ghana. James shares how integrating trees, crops, livestock, and forages on the same land can improve soil health, increase resilience to climate change, and restore degraded landscapes at scale. He also explains practical climate-smart agriculture technologies, including the half-moon planting technique, and why community engagement and local knowledge are essential to successful land restoration.

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • What silvopastoral systems are and how they support land restoration
  • How farmers in Northern Ghana are building climate resilience
  • Why agroforestry is critical in semi-arid and savannah regions
  • The role of local communities, data, and financing in global land restoration
  • One universal truth about restoring land—and why it is possible

This conversation highlights how grassroots action, combined with science-based approaches, can help meet global land restoration targets and support sustainable livelihoods.

Listen to the podcast