The Great Green Wall project, led by the African Union and financed by the World Bank, the European Union and the United Nations, was dispatched in 2007 to stop the extension of the Sahara by planting an obstruction of trees running 4,815 miles along its southern edge. Presently, as concerns mount about the effect of environmental change on the Sahel, the semiarid band of field south of the Sahara that is now quite possibly the most ruined districts on earth, the Great Green Wall is filling another job. The objective presently, state its originators, is to change the day to day routines of millions experiencing on the cutting edge of environmental change by reestablishing farming area demolished by many years of abuse; when done, it ought to give food, stem strife and debilitate movement
The Great Green Wall isn't only for the Sahel. It is a worldwide image for mankind conquering its greatest danger – our quickly corrupting climate.
It shows that on the off chance that we can work with nature, even in testing places like the Sahel, we can defeat misfortune, and assemble a superior world for a long time into the future