Site icon Afrik 21

CONGO BASIN: the objectives of the new regional forest certification scheme

CONGO BASIN: the objectives of the new regional forest certification scheme©O.Rek's/Shutterstock

The Pan-African Forest Certification (PAFC) system, whose mission is to develop sustainable forest management in Central African countries, now has a new tool. It is a unique forest certification scheme for the Congo Basin (PAFC Congo Basin). Adapted to countries sharing the second largest forest massif in the world (Democratic Republic of Congo, Cameroon, Republic of Congo, Gabon, Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea), the Congo Basin PAFC guarantees sustainable forestry operations that respect the environment, wildlife and local communities.

Composed of several standards, guides, procedures and annexes developed locally, this regional certification system offers many advantages for forestry companies wishing to commit themselves. They will benefit from access to the international market, increased competitive advantages and profits, access to demanding markets for certified products, traceability of wood supplies, etc.

Collaborations between PEFC and ATIBT

The Congo Basin PAFC is implemented with the contributions of the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) and the International Tropical Timber Technical Association (ATIBT), whose requirements guarantee international recognition.

The PAFC Congo Basin is the realization of a wish formulated on July 28th, 2020 by the ministers in charge of forests of the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC). Meeting in session, these officials asked the PAFC to develop a regional approach to its forest certification system.

read also-AFRICA: Creation of a business forum for sustainable forestry

Illegal logging, which refers to any harvesting of timber without legal authorization, or incidentally by illegal means, remains persistent in the Congo Basin. In Cameroon, for example, a recent report produced by the Center for Environment and Development (CED) and the Environmental Investigative Agency (EIA) indicates that the country lost $58 million (nearly 33 billion CFA francs), between January 2016 and July 2020, through the illegal export of its timber to Vietnam.

Boris Ngounou

Exit mobile version