Toute l'actu sur la protection de l'environnement

Tag: biodiversité

Total 69 Posts

Nyungwe and Odzala-Kokoua national parks, in Rwanda and the Republic of Congo respectively, are now part of the world heritage of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO). The decision was taken on Tuesday 19 September 2023, at a session of Unesco’s World Heritage Committee held in Riyadh, the Saudi capital.
Rwanda is no longer one of the 12 African countries without a World Heritage Site from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO). Nyungwe National Park, a tropical forest covering almost 102,000 hectares in the south-west of the East African country, is now on UNESCO’s World Heritage List. The decision was taken on Tuesday 19 September 2023, at a session of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee held in Riyadh, the Saudi capital.
Nyungwe National Park is one of the most important bird conservation sites in Africa. It is home to 12 species of mammal and seven species of bird that are globally threatened, with 317 species of bird recorded. The park also contains the most important natural habitats for a number of species found nowhere else in the world, including the eastern chimpanzee (Pan troglodyte schweinfurthii), the globally threatened golden monkey (Cercopithecus mitis ssp. kandti) and the critically endangered hill horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus hillorum).
Odzala-Kokoua National Park
This is a double coup for the Congo Basin. The world’s second largest rainforest massif saw two of its sites listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites on the same day. The Odzala-Kokoua national park, which covers 13,546 km² in the north-west of the Republic of Congo, was also listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site on 19 September 2023.
« This reaffirms Odzala’s position as a biological hotspot and one of the most species-rich areas in the world. It is home to several types of ecosystems (Congolese forest, Lower Guinea forest and savannah). Odzala is one of the most important strongholds for forest elephants in Central Africa and is home to the greatest diversity of primates in the region, notably the western lowland gorilla and the chimpanzee », describes African Parks Network.
The nature conservation non-governmental organisation (NGO), based in Johannesburg, South Africa, is responsible for managing the two new UNESCO World Heritage sites. This is thanks to long-term conservation contracts, lasting 20 years, signed with the Rwandan and Congolese governments.
Thanks to their new status, Nyungwe and Odzala-Kokoua will attract more funding for conservation and research efforts. « The first advantage is that the site benefits from immediate international recognition, which is an asset for sites that are already protected. This stimulates tourism. It demonstrates social responsibility. The site can benefit from Unesco’s network and partners. What’s more, limited funding is associated with World Heritage status, » explains Charles Karangwa, the Regional Technical Coordinator for Forest Landscapes and Livelihoods at the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) for Eastern and Southern Africa.
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Long ignored and plundered by essentially capitalist exploitation, Africa’s natural capital is now emerging as a guarantee of a green economy and an opportunity for global climate action. Studied, quantified and sustainably developed, the potential of Africa’s natural capital offers opportunities that complement private capital flows and official development assistance.
Today, Africa is at a crossroads in terms of mobilising the financial resources needed to achieve its sustainable development ambitions, and to combat and adapt to climate change. The continent must choose between nature-based financing approaches and traditional financing models that have become obsolete.
According to estimates by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), official development assistance has stagnated significantly since 2010, even falling to its lowest level in Africa, reaching 34 billion dollars in 2022. Access to international capital markets, meanwhile, has remained fairly restrictive and very costly due to investors’ high perception of risk. However, Africa, which needs $33 billion a year to adapt to climate change, is currently receiving only around $6 billion, according to data from the African Development Bank (AfDB).
Yet Africa is not short of options. As well as mobilising the private sector, it could take advantage of its enormous potential in terms of natural capital. This asset represents between 30% and 50% of the total wealth of African countries, although it is not often taken into account in economic measures such as the calculation of gross domestic product (GDP). Yet this capital offers essential assets for promoting inclusive, green growth in the face of climate change.
A rich and varied potential
Natural capital is made up of everything in ecosystems, with the exception of people and their property. It includes all the natural resources that are directly useful to humans or that they can develop technically and economically, such as water, energy, forests, mineral deposits, agricultural land and fisheries. It also includes hidden ecosystem services, such as air and water quality, protection against natural disasters, pollution control, pollution elimination and wildlife habitat.
Data compiled by the AfDB demonstrate the wealth of Africa’s natural capital. Around 30% of all the world’s mineral reserves are found on the continent, including 60% of cobalt reserves and 90% of platinum group metal reserves. The continent makes a substantial contribution to the world’s annual production of six key minerals: 80% of platinum, 77% of cobalt, 51% of manganese, 46% of diamonds, 39% of chromium and 22% of gold.
The continent also holds 7% of the world’s natural gas and oil reserves. In addition, Africa has over 60% of the world’s undeveloped arable land and is home to 13% of the world’s population, 60% of whom are under the age of 25, making it the world’s youngest population. Around 75% of African countries have access to the sea, offering huge opportunities in the blue economy, whose global potential, if managed sustainably, is estimated at around 1,500 billion dollars.
The climate component
In Central Africa, for example, natural capital offers many more opportunities. This means making sustainable use of the potential of the Congo Basin, which covers 530 million hectares, 70% of Africa’s forest cover, 6% of the world’s forest area and 91% of Africa’s dense rainforests. In terms of energy, the Congo Basin represents 17 million megawatts of renewable energy potential and almost 125,000 megawatts of hydroelectricity.
As the world’s second largest forest (after the Amazon), the Congo Basin absorbs 750 million tonnes of CO2 every year, according to the Central African Forest Commission (COMIFAC). This decisive role in global climate regulation can be used by countries in the sub-region to negotiate debt-for-nature contracts. This technique, invented by the American biologist Thomas Lovejoy, considered to be the godfather of biodiversity, ultimately consists of exchanging part of the foreign debt for local investments aimed at protecting the environment. The debt-for-nature swap is often presented as a debt relief technique for developing countries. It involves extending payment terms, reducing interest rates, granting new loans at lower rates than conventional, and even cancelling debts.
The debt-for-nature mechanism has been expanding in Africa for some time. In June 2023, Portugal announced that it would swap $153 million of Cape Verde’s debt for investments in nature. At the beginning of August 2023, Gabon concluded its own agreement, worth 450 million dollars with the Bank of America (BofA), for the protection of part of its marine ecosystem. This is the second operation of its kind on the continent after the Seychelles.
The AfDB Initiative
To improve the way natural capital is taken into account on the continent, on 9 September 2021 the AfDB launched a new initiative on integrating natural capital into development finance in Africa (Natural Capital for African Development Finance, NC4-ADF).
This 2-year programme promotes best practices for integrating natural capital into the development finance architecture. Another focus is on how to get rating agencies to integrate green growth and natural capital considerations into sovereign risk and credit ratings for African countries.
NC4-ADF is supported by the World-Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) through its dedicated agency (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit, GIZ), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the Mava Foundation, the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) and the Economics for Nature (E4N) partnership, which aims to put natural capital at the heart of economies.
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AFRICA: natural capital is gradually being taken into account

Long ignored and plundered by essentially capitalist exploitation, Africa’s natural capital is now emerging as a guarantee of a green economy and an opportunity for global climate action. Studied, quantified and sustainably developed, the potential of Africa’s natural capital offers opportunities that complement private capital flows and official development assistance.

Global Witness has drawn up a global report on crimes committed against environmental activists. In Africa, the situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is worrying. The Central African country ranks 8th in the world for the number of murders of environmental activists. Between 2012 and 2022, at least 72 environmental activists were killed in the DRC.

Between 28 and 31 May 2023, three Congolese eco-guards died from gunshot wounds. Their convoy had been violently attacked a few days earlier by Mayi-Mayi, armed groups active in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The attack on 18 May 2023 took place in Nyamusengera, near the village of Rwindi in Rutshuru territory. This attack is the latest in a long series.
Last year, the Virunga National Park Authority reported that more than 200 rangers had been killed since 1996. And in a recent report published on the night of 12-13 September 2023, Global Witness reports that between 2012 and 2022, at least 72 rangers were killed in the DRC, most of them in connection with land disputes or poaching, and often in nature reserves.
According to the study by these human rights non-governmental organisation (NGO), the DRC is the 8th country in the world with the most murders of environmental defenders. The Central African country is ranked alongside other African countries, namely Madagascar, Malawi and South Africa.
In Africa, the figures given in the report are likely to be underestimated. « In Latin America, we have a strong civil society that provides information. We also have media that document things in a way that Africa doesn’t, » Laura Furones, the report’s main author, told AFP, before adding that it is « entirely possible that there are more cases that we never hear about ».
The report calls on governments and companies to provide better protection for people who are committed to environmental conservation. In the rest of the world, the situation is hardly glowing. At least 177 environmentalists were killed worldwide in 2022. Latin America remains the most affected region in the world, led by Colombia where, according to the report, an environmental activist is killed every two days.
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DRC: 8th most dangerous country for environmental activists

Global Witness has drawn up a global report on crimes committed against environmental activists. In Africa, the situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is worrying. The Central African country ranks 8th in the world for the number of murders of environmental activists. Between 2012 and 2022, at least 72 environmental activists were killed in the DRC.

The 2023 survey report on elephants in the Kavango-Zambèze Transfrontier Area (KAZA) shows that elephant populations there are stable. In this region of southern Africa, which includes Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe, the elephant population is estimated at 227,900 individuals.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw) has just published the first-ever synchronised and comprehensive survey of elephants, carried out in the Kavango-Zambèze Transfrontier Area (KAZA). This region of southern Africa includes Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
According to the survey, elephant populations there are stable, and are estimated at 227,900 individuals. In detail, the study counts 5,983 pachyderms in Angola, 131,909 in Botswana, 21,090 in Namibia, 3,840 in Zambia and 65,028 in Zimbabwe. Only the elephant population in Zambia has declined.
« These results are very satisfying, and we congratulate the KAZA Transfrontier Conservation Area Secretariat, the States and their partners for their joint efforts to maintain stable elephant populations despite the threats posed by climate change, habitat loss and poaching, » says Philip Kuvawoga, Ifaw’s programme manager for habitat conservation.
« This rigorous survey provides an important basis for assessing the effectiveness of our joint efforts to secure a future for the region’s elephants and the human populations that live alongside them. While this is positive news, we must continue to address the growing challenges of habitat connectivity and human-elephant coexistence, and ensure that conservation actions support those who live in contact with the wildlife of this region, » adds Philip Kuvawoga.
With a surface area of 520,000 km2, around five times the size of Switzerland, the KAZA transboundary conservation area is the largest network of protected areas in Africa. The region is a veritable mosaic of landscapes, made up of grasslands, forests and wetlands. They are home to a wealth of wildlife. According to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), almost half of Africa’s savannah elephants, a quarter of Africa’s hyenas, 15% of Africa’s lions and countless other species, including buffalo, giraffe and hippopotamus, live in these reserves.
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A new project to conserve ecosystems and biodiversity around the Kibira and Rusizi protected areas in Burundi has just been launched. Supported by the European Union (EU), Belgium and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the project aims to have a positive impact on the quality of life of around 900,000 Burundians living in the areas around the two reserves.


The socio-economic situation of the people living near the Kibira and Rusizi national parks, in the north-west and west of Burundi respectively, promises to improve in the coming months. This is thanks to the Programme for the Conservation and Development of Natural Ecosystems and their Biodiversity for the Green Growth of Rural Communities in Burundi, launched on 27 July 2023 in Bujumbura.
Called « Dukingire Ibidukijije », the objectives of this new biodiversity protection project are aligned with the priorities of the Burundian government. This is reflected in the first component of the project, entitled « Support for governance and sustainable, inclusive and participatory management of the Kibira and Rusizi protected areas ». This component will be implemented by the Burundi branch of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in collaboration with the Office burundais de la protection de l’environnement (OBPE).
The project, which will be implemented in 11 communes bordering the two parks in the provinces of Bujumbura, Bubanza and Cibitoke, will promote the conservation and protection of natural resources and the socio-economic development of around 900,000 people living near the targeted protected areas.
The « protected areas » component of the « Dukingire Ibidukijije » programme has received a financial contribution of €4 million from Belgium, €1 million from the European Union (EU) and €1 million from the UNDP. « Lessons learned and/or good practices developed under previous and current biodiversity conservation programmes will be put to good use to achieve greater impact and sustainability, while at the same time involving communities, specifically women and young people living in areas bordering national parks », says UNDP Burundi.
The East African country has 14 protected areas covering 5.6% of the national territory and 31% of the surface area made up of natural ecosystems.
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