One July morning this year, offices across Ethiopia closed their doors. By mid-afternoon, nearly 15 million citizens – students, farmers, civil servants, even priests – had put down pens and tools to take up shovels. In that single day, they planted some 355 million seedlings. One of those green ambassadors was Ayanaw Behailu, 15, who said he was “very happy to see the creation of greener areas across Addis [Ababa],” the capital city.
The urgency is clear. More than 70% of Ethiopia’s territory faces desertification, threatening more than 40 million people. Launched in 2019, the Green Legacy Initiative (GLI) is the country’s audacious response: a bid to plant 50 billion trees by 2026. But more than a reforestation drive, the GLI is ecological statecraft – an attempt to braid the…
