Blog

  • Strong Majority Backs Giving Nature Legal Rights in Ghana

    Strong Majority Backs Giving Nature Legal Rights in Ghana

     

    The Rights
    of Nature Ghana Movement (RoNAG) has concluded its 2-year socio-legal study
    that
    explored how Ghana can recognize
    and protect the Rights of Nature (RoN) within its legal and governance system
    s. The study
    was titled ‘
    Assessing
    Legal Frameworks and Stakeholder Perspectives on Integrating the Rights of
    Nature into Ghana’s Environmental Governance
    ’ funded by the Gower Street
    Trust, U.K.
    The
    concept of the Rights of Nature acknowledges that ecosystems
    , such as rivers, forests,
    and wildlife
    , are not mere resources or objects to be exploited, but living entities
    w
    ith
    inherent rights to exist, thrive, and regenerate.
    The study was conducted to support the
    Rights of Nature Ghana
    Movement’s (RoNAG) reform campaign. The research evaluates
    Ghana’s environmental laws, examines international best practices, and gathers
    perspectives from key stakeholders across five regions. The findings indicate
    overwhelming public support
    , approximately
    90.5%
    for granting legal
    recognition to nature. The study concludes that adopting a Rights of Nature
    framework could strengthen environmental protection, promote sustainable development,
    and help Ghana meet its national and international climate and biodiversity
    commitments.

    The
    study in Brief

    Ghana’s
    existing environmental laws are analysed. The study also surveyed the
    acceptance rate of the international Rights of Nature (RoN) initiatives by
    gathering views from many stakeholders. It found overwhelming support of about
    90.5% in favour of giving nature legal recognition. It revealed that RoN
    principles, such as fishing taboos and prohibitions on cutting in sacred
    groves, are already embedded in customary laws and practices. Illegal
    small-scale gold mining (“galamsey”) is among the greatest environmental
    threats, and the problem persists due to weak enforcement of domestic
    environmental laws. To eliminate environmental degradation, current
    environmental laws should be updated to recognize nature’s rights, and
    enforcement strengthened. The study recommends enshrining nature’s rights in
    the laws of Ghana, reversing forest-mining permissions (e.g., canceling L.I.
    246), and working with government agencies (MESTI, EPA, Forestry Commission,
    Parliament, District Assemblies), NGOs (RoNAG, A Rocha Ghana), the education
    system (Ministry of Education, GES, universities), and traditional/local
    leaders to protect rivers and forests.

    Purpose and Significance

    The
    Earth and its ecosystems have fundamental rights to exist, live, and thrive,
    and this study was conducted to promote their legal recognition. In practice,
    this means helping Ghana’s government consider passing a RoN Act and amending
    some of its existing environmental laws so that rivers, forests, and other
    ecosystems can have legal standing. This change is needed urgently because
    Ghana is facing serious environmental decline, and its environmental laws today
    treat nature mainly as a resource for people rather than as a rights-bearing
    entity. The study highlights the adoption of new legal approaches (often called
    ecocentric or Earth-centered) worldwide. Ghana needs to catch up if it is to
    meet biodiversity and climate targets. The study specifically supports the
    Goals of the RoNAG campaign, which seeks to integrate nature’s rights into
    Ghana’s law.

    Study’s Objectives

    1.       To
    analyse Ghana’s existing environmental laws and regulations in the context of
    RoN.

    2.      
    To review global RoN
    initiatives and draw lessons for Ghana.

    3.      
    To assess stakeholder
    awareness and understanding of the RoN.

    4.      
    To identify opportunities
    and challenges for integrating RoN into Ghana’s governance.

    5.      
    To propose legal and
    policy measures for effectively including RoN in Ghana’s environmental laws.

    Key Findings

     

    Finding for Objective 1

    Ghana’s
    current laws are largely “anthropocentric,” in that they focus on how
    people use resources rather than granting rights to nature itself. For
    instance, government officials understand and explain that the Constitution and
    other environmental laws primarily aim to regulate resources for
    sustainability. They do not recognize nature as an entity with inherent rights.
    Further, no existing law explicitly grants rivers, forests, or other natural
    entities legal standing. The study shows that Ghana’s main environmental laws
    (like the EPA Act) treat nature as a resource to be managed for human benefit.

    This
    shows that Ghana’s legal system currently does not recognize nature’s inherent
    rights and will require new or amended laws to grant nature legal standing. The
    study concludes that to integrate a RoN concept into Ghana’s laws, its
    Constitution, the Environmental Protection Act, and mining laws must factor in
    the protection of ecosystems, not just human land use.

    Finding for Objective 2

    International
    examples show that declaring nature’s rights can strengthen conservation. A
    critical milestone was Ecuador’s 2008 Constitution, the first national
    constitution that identifies nature as a rights holder. Court rulings on rivers
    in India and New Zealand, and other legal advances elsewhere, set the precedent
    for Ghana. Emphasis is placed on learning from these experiences. However, to
    make these reforms possible, political backing and funding are strongly needed.

    The
    study concludes that Ghana can learn from global experiences. The RoN reforms
    often work when the public and courts understand them. In addition, they should
    incorporate the RoN principles into the constitution and other environmental
    laws, using unambiguous language that clearly recognizes nature’s rights.

    Finding for Objective 3

    Although
    many are not familiar with the global RoN concept, support for instituting RoN
    among Ghanaian stakeholders is broad. The survey results showed 90.5%
    endorsement of the idea of nature having rights. In interviews, people from
    different backgrounds (EPA officers, farmers, students, and traditional
    leaders) across all five regions reacted positively. They often echoed viewing
    nature’s rights in terms of “intergenerational justice” (fairness to
    future generations). No group opposed it; concerns focused mainly on how to
    enforce the new rights.

    With
    nearly universal stakeholder support, Ghana already has a constituency for RoN
    reforms. This broad acceptance is encouraging. However, that enthusiasm must be
    matched by public education and involvement so that they can concurrently
    support and enforce nature’s rights anywhere.

    Finding for Objective 4

    Many
    traditional beliefs already respect nature and make sure it’s properly
    protected. The study noted customary rules, such as fishing taboos on certain
    days and the designation of “sacred groves” as areas where cutting is
    forbidden, as being in alignment with the RoN principles. These cultural
    practices treat water bodies or forests as worthy of special protection. This
    already existing local alignment with RoN ideas signifies a strong opportunity
    for reform.

    Customary
    practices show that protecting nature for its own sake is not new to Ghanaian
    society. Since traditional values already align with RoN ideals, reforms to
    domestic environmental laws can build on what communities already practice. The
    study suggests the need to formally recognise and work with traditional
    authorities, because they already enforce sacred sites and taboos.

    Finding for Objective 5

    Illegal
    small-scale mining (galamsey) emerged as the biggest environmental threat,
    recurring across all regions visited. Small-scale illegal mining has moved from
    a traditional, low-impact activity into a mechanised industry where bulldozers,
    excavators, and toxic chemicals are used. This has necessitated the adoption of
    the Rights of Nature framework in Ghana to curb the catastrophic, illegal
    activity. Statistically, the exceedingly high turbidity in many major rivers
    makes water treatment by the Ghana Water Company Limited difficult. For
    instance, turbidity levels as high as 11,000 NTU (Nephelometric Turbidity
    Units) lead to pump failures and exorbitant water treatment costs (Adom, 2025).
    Apart from contaminating water bodies, artisanal and industrial mining waste
    causes respiratory diseases such as pneumonia and silicosis, with a direct
    impact on human health (Ofori, 2022). In addition, the findings revealed that
    enforcement failure is the dominant reason environmental degradation is
    advancing with impunity. The study found that enforcement failures result from
    a lack of resources and political will.

    It
    was proposed that quantifying ecosystem services and linking them to
    international finance mechanisms such as REDD+ will provide the necessary
    financial resources and make RoN policy implementation more attractive to
    politicians. This will implement the proposed three-tier reform framework
    plausibly:

     Tier 1: Immediate Statutory Targets (0–2
    years)

                     
    Initiate legislative
    review and repeal of LI 246 (permits mining in forest reserves).

                     
    Repeal Section 18 of the
    Minerals and Mining Act (allows mining entry into forest reserves).

                     
    Expand Act 29, Section
    303 to cover fish, aquatic life, and plants — the most tractable immediate
    rights of nature reform with minimal political resistance.

                     
    Operationalise the
    Environmental Protection Act 2025 (Act 1124) and its implementing regulations
    with full enforcement capacity.

                     
    Commission alternative
    livelihood programs in galamsey-affected communities as a prerequisite for
    escalating enforcement.

    Tier
    2: Institutional and Structural Reform (1–3 years)

                     
    Separate conservation and
    extraction mandates at the ministerial level (addressing the conflict of
    interest architecture identified by the Ashanti Region Wildlife Division
    officer).

                     
    Establish hybrid guardian
    institutions that formally integrate traditional authority, EPA, and civil
    society organisations into an ecosystem governance framework.

                     
    Create specialised
    environmental courts or chambers with trained judges and expedited procedures.

                     
    Establish inter-agency
    coordination mechanisms (EPA, Minerals Commission, Water Resources Commission,
    Fisheries Commission, Forestry Commission) with a unified ecosystem protection
    mandate.

                     
    Launch a Payment for
    Ecosystem Services framework linking carbon credit revenues to community
    conservation incentives.

    Tier
    3: Constitutional and Long-term Systemic Reform (3+ years)

                     
    Pursue a constitutional
    amendment recognizing natural entities as rights-bearing.

                     
    Enact a standalone Rights
    of Nature Act incorporating legal personhood, guardian institutions, and
    accountable traditional authority provisions.

                     
    Integrate rights of
    nature principles into national school curricula.

                     
    Establish a National
    Environmental Ombudsman with standing to initiate environmental litigation on
    behalf of natural entities.

                     
    Develop a community
    benefit-sharing framework that distributes carbon credit and conservation
    revenues to communities adjacent to protected areas.

    Recommendations

    Government and Regulatory Agencies.

    We recommend that the Ministry of
    Environment, Science, Technology, and Innovation, in consultation with
    Parliament, draft a RoN Act or undertake steps to amend the Constitution to
    give legal personhood to natural entities. This will build on Act 1124, which
    underscores the Precautionary Principle in environmental undertakings. In
    addition, such Acts as the Environmental Protection Act (EPA Act), Forestry
    Commission Act, and others should be amended to uphold nature’s right to exist,
    live, and thrive. For instance, Act 2022 L.I. 2462, which allows mining in
    forest reserves, should be amended to recognise nature’s existential rights.
    Furthermore, enforcement institutions should be elevated in status to enable
    them to handle flagrant violators with the most severe punishment. Some study
    participants suggested that EPA should be given greater authority. We also
    recommend granting it greater autonomy and resources to ensure that
    environmental laws are properly adhered to. In the same vein, the Forestry
    Commission and Water Resources Commission should be given the same mandate.
    Moreover, the Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) and District Chief
    Executives (DCEs) should be drawn into the implementation processes. For
    instance, the District Environmental Committees should be made to consider
    ecosystem rights when doing land-use planning.

    Education and Academia

    The Ministry of Education and the Ghana
    Education Service should add RoN and environmental ethics curricula into
    Ghanaian schools at all levels. The curricula should emphasise traditional
    environmental laws, climate change, and local conservation practices at an
    early age. Universities and research institutes should develop courses and
    degree programs in environmental law that include the Rights of Nature.
    Additionally, research institutes and funding agencies should fund graduate
    studies and research projects that assess RoN implementation.

     

    Civil Society Organisations

    CSOs should create public awareness through
    community training and public education on nature’s rights. They should run
    many sensitization campaigns that highlight protecting nature as an act of
    intergenerational justice. Further, they should use the law courts to promote
    the RoN principle in Ghana’s environmental legal frameworks. Moreover, CSOs
    should train EPA staff, judges, and local officials on Rights-of-Nature
    concepts in partnership with the government and international donors.

     

    Traditional Authorities and Local Communities

    Indigenous knowledge researchers must partner
    with local communities to document the traditional taboos, sacred groves, and
    other local practices that align with RoN. District Assemblies should draft
    bylaws to legally protect natural entities. Highly respected local authorities,
    such as chiefs, queen mothers, and assembly members, should be appointed and
    monitored as Guardians of Nature for specific entities, such as trees or
    rivers. These local guardians should work with the police to protect nature’s
    interests.

     

    Conclusion

    This study demonstrates
    that integrating the Rights of Nature into Ghana’s environmental governance is
    both feasible and widely supported. By aligning legal reforms with cultural
    traditions, stakeholder expectations, and global best practices, Ghana can establish
    a transformative framework for ecological protection and sustainable
    development.

    Dr Dickson Adom, Director and Lead Campaigner of RoNAG