The Congo Basin is the largest forest in Africa and a significantly important carbon storage in the world.
With more than 10,000 plant species in and around the
forest,
the Basin is referred to as the “green lungs of Africa” – the ecological
respiratory organ for the planet.
The rainforest of the Congo basin spans over six
countries – Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of
the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Republic of the Congo – providing food, freshwater, medicine, security and
an essential lifeline for local populations and serves as a critical habitat
for endangered species.
But
most critically, preserving the rich ecosystem of the Congo Basin is essential
in the global efforts to tackle the effects of climate change and biodiversity
loss.
The
soils and plants of the Congo Basin rainforest store incredible amounts of
carbon, preventing it from being emitted into the atmosphere and fueling
climate change.
Carbon
sinks are natural areas such as oceans and forests, which absorb carbon dioxide
(Co2) from the atmosphere, helping to curb global warming.
The
Congo Basin, with its dense tropical peatlands, is estimated to pull around 4%
of global Co2 emissions out of the atmosphere each year.
Threat of land grabbing and industrial agriculture
Central Africa's rainforest stood at 178 million hectares in 2005.
The
African region has lost 65 per cent of its productive land over the last 70
years, whereas the population has grown at least sixfold over the same period.
The
Congo Basin is increasingly coming under threat due to deforestation,
environmental degradation, growing populations, and the impact of climate
change.
Several international fossil fuel and industrial-scale agriculture
developers, mostly in rubber and oil palm plantations and, fueling wide-scale
deforestation.
The
move for land grabbing to exploit Africa’s resources for export has put the
Congo Basin under threat. Illegal timber cut in the Basin is exported to the
EU, US and China.
Unsustainable
and illegal logging in the Congo Basin forest is leading to deforestation,
destruction of wildlife habitat, diminished resilience to climate change.
Forest loss in the Congo Basin increased by 5% in
2021. The Democratic Republic of Congo alone lost
nearly 500,000 hectares of primary forest in 2021.
The increased
loss of biodiversity and threatened species will undermine efforts to protect
biodiversity, and of the need to take urgent action to preserve ecosystem
services vital to human well-being, including crop pollination, water
purification, food security, clean air, flood protection and carbon
sequestration.
Of the
hundreds of mammal species discovered in the Congo Basin so far — including
forest elephants, gorillas, chimpanzees, and okapis — 39 are found nowhere else
on Earth. Of its estimated 10,000 plant species, 3,300 are also unique to the
region.
Conserving
the Basin as climate action
The
United Nations Environment Assembly recognizes that the Congo Basin peatlands
contain a high proportion of organic carbon, making them one of the world's
largest carbon sinks, contributing to the mitigation of global climate change.
This is
in “considering the benefits and values of Congo Basin peatlands, which
sequester more than 31 billion tonnes of carbon and provide vital ecosystem
functions and services that reduce the magnitude and mitigate the impact of
floods and droughts, preserve biodiversity and provide food and water
supplies,” emphasized the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment
(AMCEN).
At the
recent AMCEN meeting in Addis Ababa, the African Group of Negotiators was urged
to continue working with the COP 28 parties and the presidency to reach further
decisions that recognize the special needs and circumstances of Africa and “to
intensify regional and international collaboration to promote a
multi-stakeholder approach to the conservation and sustainable management of
peatlands in the Congo Basin, in line with Brazzaville 2018 declaration;
adopted at the third meeting of Global Peatlands Initiative partners”.
The
leaders also welcomed the initiative of the Republic of Congo to organize the
Summit "Amazon - Borneo - Mekong and Southeast Asia - Congo, Summit of the
Three Basins of Ecosystems of Biodiversity and Tropical Forests (S3B
EBFT)".
This is
in order to constitute, through the union of the three basins, a global
alliance, biodiversity ecosystems and tropical forests, an Alliance/Coalition
with a South-South governance, structuring the three global ecosystems that
represent 80% of tropical forests around the world, bringing together 2/3 of
terrestrial biodiversity and ensuring the vital role of global regulator of
carbon balance and life on earth.
The
three basins are expected to capture 80% of the existing and future financial
mobilization announced at COP 27 for climate and COP 15 for biodiversity.
By Kofi
Adu Domfeh
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