DRC: a study is launched to determine the country’s forestry heritage

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RDC : une étude est lancée pour déterminer le patrimoine forestier du pays©Sergey Uryadnikov/Shutterstock

The Congolese DR Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development proceeded on March 14, 2023 in Kinshasa, to the official launch of the study on the national forestry capital. This study, which will last one year, aims to determine the ecological, economic and social potential of the forest massifs of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) wants to have detailed knowledge of its forest heritage. This is the meaning of the national workshop to launch the study on the forest capital of the DRC, organized on March 14, 2023 in Kinshasa by the General Secretariat for the Environment and Sustainable Development (SG-EDD) and the General Secretariat for Land Management (SG-AT), in collaboration with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the support of the National REDD+ Fund (FONAREDD).

“The DRC plays an important role in the fight against climate change. It is the solution for the climate crisis. This study will allow us to determine the ecological, economic and social conservation potential of the massifs for the whole of the DRC; to produce cartographic information that will be compiled in a commented atlas and to formulate concrete proposals for the different types of forests in the country,” explains Joseph Ezpua, UNDP Team Leader for Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development in the DRC.

Read also-CONGO: Summit of the world’s three great forest basins, scheduled for June 2023

Technically led by the Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, through its General Secretariat, this study will be conducted for one year. It is financed through the DRC’s National REDD+ Fund (FONAREDD).

The conservation of the DRC’s forests is crucial to the climate objectives set at the global level. With 60% of the Congo Basin forests, the country has 31.6 million hectares of protected areas, 14.7 million hectares of conservation concessions, and 2.8 million hectares of local community forest concessions.

Boris Ngounou

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