Ethiopia’s Green Legacy Initiative reached the milestone of 8 billion seedlings planted since the program’s launch in 2019, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government announced in 2026, continuing a national tree-planting campaign that has become one of the largest environmental restoration programs in Africa and one of the most ambitious government-led reforestation efforts globally. The program, which mobilizes millions of Ethiopians annually in coordinated tree-planting events that combine government organization, local community participation, school programs, and diaspora engagement, has grown from the ambitious single-day planting target of 200 million trees on a single day in July 2019 – which Ethiopia claims to have met – to sustained multi-season planting campaigns that have progressively expanded the geographic reach and institutional infrastructure of the reforestation effort. The 8 billion seedling milestone represents a cumulative achievement over seven years of the program, with annual planting targets increasing each year as the program has built capacity in seedling production, community mobilization, and survival monitoring.

Ethiopia’s Green Legacy Initiative addresses an acute environmental challenge. Ethiopia’s forest cover has declined dramatically over the past century from estimates of 35-40 percent of land area at the turn of the 20th century to approximately 15 percent in recent decades, driven by agricultural expansion, fuel wood collection, charcoal production, and population growth. The consequences of deforestation include soil erosion, reduced water retention, declining agricultural productivity, increased flooding and drought vulnerability, and contribution to greenhouse gas emissions through carbon loss from degraded forest soils. The Green Legacy program’s reforestation targets were initially criticized by some environmental scientists who questioned the survival rates of planted seedlings – planting a seedling does not guarantee a tree – and who noted that the program’s headline numbers counted seedlings distributed or planted rather than trees that survived to maturity. The Ethiopian government and supporting organizations have worked to strengthen monitoring and survival rate assessment since the early years of the program, with improved seedling production practices, aftercare programs, and community stewardship arrangements intended to increase the fraction of planted seedlings that survive to become established trees. The program’s 2026 scale reflects both the genuine environmental commitment that underlies it and the political communication value that mass tree planting events provide for a government that has faced significant criticism over Ethiopia’s prolonged conflicts in Tigray and other regions. The security challenges across the region provide context for why environmental initiatives that offer a positive national mobilization narrative hold particular political value for African governments navigating complex internal security environments.

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