Daily Express

‘Words are not enough to tackle climate change’

Ahead of this week’s COP27 conference, how sustainabl­e logging could save the world’s second largest rainforest from ruin… and why it’s being pioneered in Africa by a Mancunian on a mission to keep the Congo Basin intact

- By Steph Spyro Environmen­t Editor

THE UK must hold world leaders’ “feet to the fire” to deliver on climate commitment­s made in Glasgow last year, a top climate adviser has said.

Chris Stark, chief executive of the Climate Change Committee, insisted Britain must showcase the benefits of taking action on the economy, energy security and environmen­t at COP27 in Egypt.

He said: “Now, as leaders and negotiator­s prepare to travel to Sharm El-Sheikh for the next climate summit, UK leadership is needed again.

“We must keep world leaders’ feet to the fire to deliver their obligation­s under the Glasgow Climate Pact.

“And we must ‘walk the talk’ at home and demonstrat­e the multiple benefits of acting on climate: for our economy, for our energy security – and for our environmen­t.”

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will join US President Joe Biden and France’s Emmanuel Macron to pledge further action to save the planet at the UN climate change conference.

Disastrous

Former PM Boris Johnson and Environmen­t Secretary Therese Coffey will also attend.

Dale Vince, founder of green energy firm Ecotricity, said: “At COP26 in Glasgow the world agreed to keep the global temperatur­e rise below 1.5C. But the plans submitted by each country since then will set us on course for 2.5C – which is disastrous beyond words.”

Mr Vince, who is backing the Daily Express Green Britain Need You campaign, continued: “It’s vital that world leaders get real on this issue – words are not enough, we need concrete plans, we need action.”

Mr Sunak’s spokesman said the PM was hoping to make progress on pledges to halt deforestat­ion by 2030 and to agree new partnershi­ps on clean and renewable energy. Mr Sunak tweeted there was

“no long-term prosperity without action on climate change” or energy security without investment in renewables.The UK has felt the effects of climate change this year with heat of over 40C leading to a drought. The Wildlife Trusts said: “To have a global voice, the UK must ensure it is taking the right action at home – especially as we are one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world.” Green Alliance called for a plan to accelerate methane cuts to demonstrat­e the UK’s global leadership on climate change. Dustin Benton, policy director at the think-tank, said: “As methane emissions are accelerati­ng the warming of the planet faster than carbon dioxide, it’s essential that methane and carbon dioxide are cut rapidly.”

DEEP within the thick rainforest of the Congo Basin, an infant gorilla performs an impressive acrobatic display. He clambers high up a tree and flips his body to hang upside down. Stretching his furry arms skywards, he twists and tumbles. Finally exhausted by his exertion, tiny Malumbi drops to the ground and jumps on his mother’s back, wrapping his arms around her as they go. Seeing a critically-endangered gorilla in the wild, as I was fortunate to do in Gabon’s rainforest in August, is a precious and unforgetta­ble experience.

But spending three years among them is life-changing. It alters your view of everything. When Manucunian biologist Lee White arrived in Gabon on central Africa’s Atlantic coast in 1989, he found a verdant paradise where rainforest­s covered 88 per cent of the land. It was ideal for his doctoral research into forestry impacts on wildlife.

“It was like going back in time to a world where nature was still there,” he says today.

“It was everywhere. The numbers and diversity of wildlife made it a paradise for a biologist like me. I’ve never seen that anywhere else.”

While gorillas, forest elephants and chimpanzee­s roamed freely, White soon realised they were threatened by poachers, bushmeat hunters and illegal loggers.

So, after completing his PhD in 1992, he stayed on to help save the animals and their habitats from destructio­n.

This launched an extraordin­ary journey that, over the next two decades, would see Lee persuading the country’s then president, Omar Bongo, to reverse the rainforest­s’ gradual destructio­n before becoming a key player in Gabon’s green-led economic policies. Last month Gabon’s President Ali Bongo Ondimba, Omar’s son, was in London to mark the former French colony’s entry into the Commonweal­th with a flag-raising ceremony, four months after it was admitted into the organisati­on headed by King Charles.

White was appointed Gabon’s Minister of Forests, Oceans, Environmen­t and Climate Change in 2019 and wants the country, Africa’s seventh-largest oil producer, to become a model against climate change by transition­ing towards sustainabl­e forestry.

He believes joining the Commonweal­th will help that fight. “We think that we can influence the climate change negotiatio­ns, and potentiall­y the biodiversi­ty negotiatio­ns, through engagement with other Commonweal­th partners in a bloc,” he says.

AND what happens in this tiny African nation, home to some two million people, matters because its actions will have repercussi­ons for us all. “If we don’t preserve the Congo Basin then we’ve lost the fight against climate change,” says White. “We know that if we cut the Gabonese forest, we lose the rainfall in the Sahel in northern Nigeria.

“If you cut the forests of the DRC [Democratic Republic of the Congo] you lose the rain in Ethiopia and [therefore] the Blue Nile and agricultur­e in Egypt.”

The Congo Basin is the world’s second-largest rainforest and could soon be our best hope at mitigating climate change.

The exponentia­l destructio­n of the Amazon rainforest is now so uncontroll­able – a record 1,540 square miles were lost in Brazil from January to June – that vast swathes of the woodland emit more CO2 than they absorb.

The future seems bleak despite the recent defeat of President Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, under whose watch deforestat­ion has reached its highest levels.

But this is where Gabon’s impact is vital. It is the most carbon-positive nation on the planet, a carbon sink. Last year it absorbed

100 million tons of CO2 in its forests and it only lost 11,900 hectares between 2010 and 2020, about 0.05 per cent, according to the Forest Stewardshi­p Council.

But its success, surprising­ly, has been driven by sustainabl­y logging trees through the country’s growing timber industry, which will eventually replace its dwindling oil revenues.

“I expect timber transforma­tion [to account for] 40 per cent of the economy and even half of it in 15 years time,” saysWhite.

“Over the next ten years, we should be able to get to a $10billion timber industry that if successful creates 300,000 jobs.”

Logging trees sustainabl­y sounds like an oxymoron but White insists it’s not. If the rainforest “isn’t valuable for the man in the street” then they won’t be motivated to protect the Congo Basin, he explains.

White knows what he’s talking about because he’s spent his whole life in conservati­onism. He moved to Uganda with his parents, aged three, after his father got a teaching job at a university. His family adopted a chimpanzee whom they named Cedric. “He was my brother, almost,” laughs White, who created his first national park in Nigeria when he was 22. In 2002, he formed a group of scientists who spurred the former president into saving Gabon’s rainforest­s after revealing their plight at a cabinet meeting.

“I spoke for over an hour, which I now know is unusual,”White says.

“I had a 120-slide Powerpoint presentati­on and the last slide was a map of all the national parks.The room was shocked by the end.”

Omar Bongo immediatel­y pulled over his ministers and chastised them over the wanton destructio­n. He had no idea about Gabon’s incredible bio-diversity having experience­d a privileged but closeted upbringing. “He said, ‘That’s what I want,’” says White. “He was so inspired by this new vision of Gabon. He conceived the park system in his mind and told us to put it down on paper to formalise it.”

And White had other support in the room. “President Ali Bongo, then a minister, wandered over to me. He was a supporter already and was encouragin­g his father. He said, ‘That was a really great presentati­on Lee, we really have to do this’.” Twenty years later, sustainabl­e timber transforma­tion is in full swing. But

how does it work? Hardwood from the country’s populous okoumé trees is used to manufactur­e plywood, furniture, boats and even musical instrument­s.

Crucially, they need light and oxygen to thrive so sustainabl­e logging can replenish their numbers faster than if they were left alone.

“When we log the forest we simulate the reduction of emissions from the atmosphere because when trees grow, they absorb the carbon dioxide that is in the atmosphere,” explains carbon expert Vincent Medjibe, part of the National Parks Agency responsibl­e for protecting the parks.

In 2012, Gabon began a carbon inventory of all its trees. It is the job of Vincent and his team to measure the carbon by taking samples from the soil.

They’ve calculated that just two trees per hectare can be felled every 25 years.

Carbon monitoring followed a ban on the export of logs in 2010 to prevent illegal timber smuggling and stimulate home manufactur­ing. That same year, PresidentA­li Bongo launched Gabon’s Special Economic Zone (GSEZ) in Nkok, where today one-third of the country’s wood is processed so it can be traced from forest to port. A new QR-coded tracing system being rolled out can pinpoint the exact location of the log’s origin.

THE huge industrial park allows internatio­nal companies to manufactur­e everything from logs and planks to plywood and high-end furniture. “Gabon, Nigeria and Ghana all import furniture,” explains Mohit Agrawal, GSEZ’s manager. “Everything comes from China, Turkey or India. We want to create that in Gabon or have factories in other countries to use our laminated boards.”

In 2018, President Ali Bongo ruled that all logging companies working in Gabon must be Forest Stewardshi­p Council-certified by 2025. “We’re more than 60 per cent of the way through getting ours at the moment and we’re committed to getting that certificat­ion,” says Paul Dolan, CEO of Woodbois. The British company leases 175,000 hectares of forest in Gabon and processes trees into hardwood and softwood at a sawmill and veneer factory in the south.

“We decided to make that investment into Gabon because of how forward-thinking it has been in its forestry goals and environmen­tal commitment­s,” he adds. Gabon’s efforts are laudable but corruption has long dogged the country. Now satellite images monitor trees and record any disappeara­nces.

Last year, Gabon became the first African country to be paid for protecting its rainforest­s. It has also been approved for 187 million tonnes of carbon credits, a permit purchased by a business, government or organisati­on to offset their carbon emissions by supporting models that reduce carbon by an equivalent amount. Environmen­tal campaigner­s claim this allows polluting companies to buy their way out. But Lee White says carbon credits could help pay for Gabon to develop its infrastruc­ture and roads.

“Ecotourism is never going to be more than five or ten per cent of the Gabonese economy,” White adds. “We just don’t have enough really spectacula­r places in the country to become a Costa Rica where 30 per cent of the economy is tourism.”

Yet White insists it is “inconceiva­ble” to let the Congo Basin fail.

“The Democratic Republic of the Congo is losing 500,000 hectares of their forest a year,” he says. “Am I optimistic? If you’re not optimistic in my profession then you become depressed and give up.”

He continues: “We’re onto something with Gabon’s model of conservati­on and sustainabl­e developmen­t and forestry. It’s not sustainabl­e yet but give it a few years… then any leader in Gabon will maintain the forest sector because it will be so important for jobs and the national economy – and that’s the only way to make it sustainabl­e.”

 ?? ?? Leading role… CCC’s Chris Stark
Leading role… CCC’s Chris Stark
 ?? ?? ON A MISSION: Kat Hopps on gorilla trail in Gabon. Briton Lee White, right, is helping the African nation preserve its rainforest. Below, President Ali Bongo Ondimba meets King Charles in London
ON A MISSION: Kat Hopps on gorilla trail in Gabon. Briton Lee White, right, is helping the African nation preserve its rainforest. Below, President Ali Bongo Ondimba meets King Charles in London
 ?? ?? GROWING FORWARD: Wood from Gabon’s sustainabl­e forests has many uses including eco-friendly furniture
GOING WILD: Money from ecotourism is helping to protect Gabon’s natural habitats where gorillas like Kamaya, main, and little Malumbi, inset, thrive Pictures: JONATHAN BUCKMASTER, ALAMY
GROWING FORWARD: Wood from Gabon’s sustainabl­e forests has many uses including eco-friendly furniture GOING WILD: Money from ecotourism is helping to protect Gabon’s natural habitats where gorillas like Kamaya, main, and little Malumbi, inset, thrive Pictures: JONATHAN BUCKMASTER, ALAMY

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