The Restore Ghana Project (RGP) is more than an environmental clean-up – it’s a $200 million blueprint for sustainable development, ecological regeneration, and national pride.
Structured and financed under the leadership of Harris Owusu Ansu Gyeabour, RGP is reclaiming degraded land across Ghana’s mineral-rich zones. Through a mix of afforestation, ecological engineering, and community employment, the project is transforming extractive scars into productive landscapes.
RGP’s core innovation? It fuses sustainability with logistics. Green supply chain models, solar-powered mining camps, and drone-based land monitoring have become key pillars. Beyond the land, the initiative empowers local communities through job creation, vocational training, and SME integration into the logistics value chain.
The project is being closely studied by international development agencies and climate financing bodies, positioning Ghana as a leader in eco-logistics innovation.
