Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • African palm plantation affected by floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_89...jpg
  • African palm plantation affected by floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_89...jpg
  • African palm plantation in Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_81...jpg
  • African palm plantation in Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_81...jpg
  • African palm plantation in Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_81...jpg
  • African palm plantation in Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_81...jpg
  • A tributary to the Aguán river, Honduras. Massive palm plantations dominate agriculture in the area.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_81...jpg
  • In Sarakoh village in northern Sierra Leone, World Renew works with partner CER. In this region african palm oil is extracted in the traditional way by hand. First the palm oil nuts are harvested from the trees and the nuts removed from the bunches. The nuts are boiled with water in a drum and some of the oil comes to the surface and is skimmed off, then the remaining mixture is put in a pit and workers break the boiled nuts down with their feet, finally the mash is squeezed by hand to extract the last of the oil. A jerrycan of oil is sold on the local market for less than ten dollars.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Juan Antonio Ramirez, Dos Bocas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras<br />
<br />
"the community was affected firstly by the flooding, most of it was under 1.5m of water, people lost everything, their kitchens, bedding, domestic animals like pigs and chickens. In agricultural prodution people lost rice, maize, bananas, the basic food for people. The flooding also affected the roads, it cut through 7m deep and 20m wide in one place. It will need a big investment to get us back to where we were. But because we can't get in to the fields because of the roads, we don't know how we'll replant"
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_85...jpg
  • Juan Antonio Ramirez, Dos Bocas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras<br />
<br />
"the community was affected firstly by the flooding, most of it was under 1.5m of water, people lost everything, their kitchens, bedding, domestic animals like pigs and chickens. In agricultural prodution people lost rice, maize, bananas, the basic food for people. The flooding also affected the roads, it cut through 7m deep and 20m wide in one place. It will need a big investment to get us back to where we were. But because we can't get in to the fields because of the roads, we don't know how we'll replant"
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_85...jpg
  • Juan Antonio Ramirez, Dos Bocas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras<br />
<br />
"the community was affected firstly by the flooding, most of it was under 1.5m of water, people lost everything, their kitchens, bedding, domestic animals like pigs and chickens. In agricultural prodution people lost rice, maize, bananas, the basic food for people. The flooding also affected the roads, it cut through 7m deep and 20m wide in one place. It will need a big investment to get us back to where we were. But because we can't get in to the fields because of the roads, we don't know how we'll replant"
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_85...jpg
  • In Sarakoh village in northern Sierra Leone, World Renew works with partner CER. In this region african palm oil is extracted in the traditional way by hand. First the palm oil nuts are harvested from the trees and the nuts removed from the bunches. The nuts are boiled with water in a drum and some of the oil comes to the surface and is skimmed off, then the remaining mixture is put in a pit and workers break the boiled nuts down with their feet, finally the mash is squeezed by hand to extract the last of the oil. A jerrycan of oil is sold on the local market for less than ten dollars.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg