Berliner Boersenzeitung - Scientists fight to protect DR Congo rainforest as threats increase

EUR -
AED 3.847595
AFN 70.955217
ALL 98.129555
AMD 407.873345
ANG 1.877009
AOA 956.396496
ARS 1052.049047
AUD 1.610027
AWG 1.888176
AZN 1.778779
BAM 1.955374
BBD 2.102782
BDT 124.452883
BGN 1.956627
BHD 0.394854
BIF 3076.35906
BMD 1.047532
BND 1.403708
BOB 7.23656
BRL 6.114418
BSD 1.041483
BTN 88.395715
BWP 14.228171
BYN 3.408322
BYR 20531.622365
BZD 2.099283
CAD 1.462931
CDF 3007.463637
CHF 0.932508
CLF 0.03692
CLP 1018.737053
CNY 7.590098
CNH 7.59878
COP 4598.402514
CRC 530.489476
CUC 1.047532
CUP 27.759591
CVE 110.855692
CZK 25.335395
DJF 185.46313
DKK 7.457905
DOP 62.766923
DZD 140.965938
EGP 52.004718
ERN 15.712976
ETB 127.496637
FJD 2.382454
FKP 0.826835
GBP 0.833641
GEL 2.870045
GGP 0.826835
GHS 16.546166
GIP 0.826835
GMD 74.374398
GNF 8977.129671
GTQ 8.084076
GYD 219.097457
HKD 8.151698
HNL 26.318517
HRK 7.472315
HTG 136.711517
HUF 411.800971
IDR 16654.445463
ILS 3.862223
IMP 0.826835
INR 88.266649
IQD 1364.328775
IRR 44074.898841
ISK 145.481021
JEP 0.826835
JMD 165.915433
JOD 0.743012
JPY 161.935842
KES 135.658433
KGS 90.613407
KHR 4193.126388
KMF 494.957723
KPW 942.778181
KRW 1468.838686
KWD 0.322504
KYD 0.867927
KZT 520.016622
LAK 22876.452218
LBP 93263.459457
LKR 303.119741
LRD 189.027228
LSL 18.793764
LTL 3.093089
LVL 0.633642
LYD 5.085989
MAD 10.535438
MDL 18.996224
MGA 4861.033639
MKD 61.641022
MMK 3402.342273
MNT 3559.512841
MOP 8.35024
MRU 41.439366
MUR 49.056254
MVR 16.194626
MWK 1805.940983
MXN 21.368218
MYR 4.674611
MZN 66.947912
NAD 18.793764
NGN 1768.715105
NIO 38.322016
NOK 11.58104
NPR 140.650696
NZD 1.79238
OMR 0.403283
PAB 1.04728
PEN 3.94914
PGK 4.193126
PHP 61.827942
PKR 289.212844
PLN 4.334985
PYG 8130.3837
QAR 3.819351
RON 4.976436
RSD 117.00301
RUB 108.876923
RWF 1421.703797
SAR 3.932779
SBD 8.78204
SCR 15.752477
SDG 630.091354
SEK 11.518303
SGD 1.411093
SHP 0.826835
SLE 23.810185
SLL 21966.222062
SOS 595.175999
SRD 37.181136
STD 21681.792335
SVC 9.113188
SYP 2631.954808
SZL 18.787265
THB 36.265313
TJS 11.15323
TMT 3.666361
TND 3.327129
TOP 2.453421
TRY 36.221028
TTD 7.073459
TWD 34.008644
TZS 2775.959214
UAH 43.086435
UGX 3869.619193
USD 1.047532
UYU 44.537316
UZS 13361.088752
VES 48.47434
VND 26633.494828
VUV 124.365075
WST 2.92428
XAF 655.820364
XAG 0.034027
XAU 0.000392
XCD 2.831007
XDR 0.792243
XOF 655.820364
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.804392
ZAR 18.924922
ZMK 9429.03573
ZMW 28.770281
ZWL 337.304797
  • RBGPF

    59.2400

    59.24

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.79

    -0.15%

  • CMSC

    0.0320

    24.672

    +0.13%

  • RELX

    0.9900

    46.75

    +2.12%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    33.96

    +0.77%

  • NGG

    1.0296

    63.11

    +1.63%

  • RIO

    -0.2200

    62.35

    -0.35%

  • AZN

    1.3700

    65.63

    +2.09%

  • BTI

    0.4000

    37.38

    +1.07%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    13.27

    +1.73%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.21

    -0.15%

  • VOD

    0.1323

    8.73

    +1.52%

  • BCC

    3.4200

    143.78

    +2.38%

  • CMSD

    0.0150

    24.46

    +0.06%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    26.77

    +0.34%

  • BP

    0.2000

    29.72

    +0.67%

Scientists fight to protect DR Congo rainforest as threats increase
Scientists fight to protect DR Congo rainforest as threats increase / Photo: Guerchom Ndebo - AFP

Scientists fight to protect DR Congo rainforest as threats increase

A tower bristling with sensors juts above the canopy in northern Democratic Republic of Congo, measuring carbon dioxide emitted from the world's second-largest tropical rainforest.

Text size:

Spanning several countries in central Africa, the Congo Basin rainforest covers an immense area and is home to a dizzying array of species.

But there are growing concerns for the future of the forest, deemed critical for sequestering CO2, as loggers and farmers push ever deeper inside.

Scientists at the Yangambi Biosphere Reserve in the DRC's Tshopo province are studying the rainforest's role in climate change -- a subject that received scant attention until recently.

Standing 55 metres tall, the CO2-measuring flux tower came online in 2020 in the lush reserve of 250,000 hectares (620,000 acres).

Yangambi was renowned for tropical agronomy research during the Belgian colonial era.

This week, it also hosted scientists as part of meetings in the DRC dubbed pre-COP 27, ahead of the COP27 climate summit in Egypt in November.

Thomas Sibret, who runs the CongoFlux CO2 measuring project, said that flux towers are common worldwide.

But until one was set up in Yangambi, there had been none in Congo, which had "limited our understanding of this ecosystem", he said.

Around 30 billion tonnes of carbon are stored across the Congo Basin, researchers estimated in a study in Nature in 2016. The figure is roughly equivalent to three years' of global emissions.

Sibret said more time is required to draw definitive conclusions from the data gathered by DRC's flux tower, but one thing is certain: The rainforest sequesters more greenhouse gases than it emits.

- 'No more trees' -

Paolo Cerutti, the head of the Center for International Forestry Research's operations in Congo, said this was good news.

In Latin America, "we're starting to see evidence that the Amazon (rainforest) is becoming more of an emitter," he said.

"We're betting a lot on the Congo Basin, especially the DRC, which has 160 million hectares of forest still capable of absorbing carbon."

But Cerutti warned that slash-and-burn agriculture poses a particular threat to the future of the rainforest, pointing out that half a million hectares of forest were lost last year.

Slash-and-burn agriculture sees villagers cultivate lands until they become depleted, then clear forests to create new lands, and repeat the cycle.

With the DRC's population of about 100 million people set to expand, many worry the forest is in dire threat.

Jean-Pierre Botomoito, the head of the Yanonge area about 40 kilometres (24 miles) from Yangambi, said that he once thought the forest was inexhaustible.

But "here, there are no trees," he said.

Villagers in his once-forested region now have to travel long distances along narrow muddy paths to find tree-dwelling caterpillars -- a local delicacy.

Charcoal used for cooking in the absence of electricity and gas is similarly hard to obtain.

There are efforts to help farmers in the remote and impoverished region to make a living while sustaining the environment.

A largely EU-financed project, for example, trains farmers to rotate cassava and groundnut crops between fast-growing acacia trees.

Farmers can harvest the acacia trees to make charcoal after six years.

Experts also encourage the use of more efficient kilns to produce more charcoal and teach loggers how to select which trees to fell.

- Vandalism -

Jean Amis, the head of a local farmers' organisation, was enthusiastic about the project.

"We didn't necessarily have the right practices" before, he said.

Others are too.

Helene Fatouma, the president of a women's association, says fishponds on the edge of the forest now yield 1,450 kilos of fish in six months, as opposed to 30 previously.

But not all residents of the surrounding area support the various schemes.

Some people believe that the flux tower is stealing oxygen, for example, or that it is a prelude to land appropriation.

Researchers often find dendrometers -- devices that measure tree dimensions -- vandalised, and some traditional chiefs think the forest will grow back by itself without outside interference.

The Indonesia-based Center for International Forestry Research says that resistance to the schemes can be overcome through raising awareness.

Dieu Merci Assumani, the director of the DRC's National Institute for Agricultural Research, agreed.

But he said there needs to be more financing for locals, who have seen little benefit from promised funds to protect the rainforest.

Assumani pointed as an example to the $500-million deal to protect the Congo Basin rainforest, signed by President Felix Tshisekedi and then British prime minister Boris Johnson in Glasgow last year.

"Commitments are all very well, but they need to be disbursed," he said.

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)