The Daily Telegraph

‘If the Congo Basin forest is lost then so is the fight against climate change’

- By Emma Gatten ENVIRONMEN­T EDITOR

At a hilltop research centre high above the tree canopy, Vincent Medjibe is assessing the power of Gabon’s forests. Tasked in 2012 with working out just how much of the world’s emissions are sucked up by his country’s vast forests, Mr Medjibe can tell just by looking how much carbon is locked in a single patch of trees.

Unlike its neighbours in Central Africa, Gabon has protected its share of the Congo Basin from intensive logging and farming, and is still more than 80 per cent forest in a country the size of the UK. That has made it a haven for wildlife, including 60 per cent of the continent’s forest elephants, but also a carbon sink, sucking up 140 million tonnes of CO2 every year, according to Mr Medjibe’s calculatio­ns, compared with the 40 million tonnes it emits.

That leaves 100 million tonnes that it is sequesteri­ng from the rest of the world, roughly the annual emissions of a country such as Belgium, and making it one of the world’s last remaining carbon-negative countries.

With the oil reserves it relies on for 45 per cent of GDP now dwindling, Gabon now wants to be paid for its role as the world’s “second lung”, as the Congo Basin is known.

“We are doing all this not only for us but for the rest of the world,” says Mr Medjibe. “Before, our natural resource was petrol, now it’s forest.”

The government says it wants to exploit its forests without destroying them, leapfroggi­ng the environmen­tal destructio­n which accompanie­d developmen­t in the West.

It wants to grow its timber industry, which is based around the regional okoume tree, a fast-growing siennahued hardwood, often used to make boats and guitars, and to expand its nascent tourism industry.

It also hopes to start selling carbon credits and is lobbying government­s and the internatio­nal media for support in the run-up to the November COP26 climate summit in Glasgow.

Current rules make it easier to sell credits from projects that end deforestat­ion, rather than for protecting existing forests.

As Tanguy Gahouma-bekale, the country’s lead climate negotiator, puts it: “Everybody wants to reward the bad guy, but nobody wants to pay for the good guy.”

The man in charge of protecting Gabon’s natural capital is Lee White, the British-born environmen­t minister, who has been entrusted by the president, Ali Bongo Ondimba.

Mr White, who first came to the country in the 1980s as a researcher, is a close ally of the president and has built something of a cult following in Gabon. “The only way to save forests is to make them valuable,” said Mr White at his home in Libreville.

“It’s a bigger picture than just Gabon. The Congo Basin has about 10 years of global emissions locked up in the forest, in its soil.

“So if we lose the Congo Basin forest, we lose the fight against climate change.”

A new law will establish Gabon’s own carbon market, and create credits that can eventually be sold to countries or companies as offsets.

Gabon’s logic is clear: its forest protection efforts are doing vital work for the rest of the world in the fight against climate change, for which it should be remunerate­d.

But there is a hidden “jeopardy” in the plan, according to Simon Lewis, a professor of global change science at University College London.

Creating offsets from pre-existing forest could allow companies to claim they are carbon neutral, without any real cut in overall global emissions.

Relying on forests as offsets is also dangerous because of the difficulty of ensuring they stand.

“I’m very sympatheti­c to the position Gabon finds itself in,” said Mr Lewis, who has advised the environmen­t ministry.

Mr White counters that without internatio­nal backing, Gabon’s forests and their global role will be put at risk.

A growing population will increase demand for the jobs and incomes from industrial-scale logging, and the changing climate will push migrants into the country from harder hit areas, requiring more agricultur­al land.

“It sounds like a threat, doesn’t it?” he said.

Already the government has faced pushback from local communitie­s who rely on the forests for subsistenc­e.

It is now engaged in a project to build fences to protect village farming plots from elephants in its national parks, which were created in 2002 across 11 per cent of the country and restrict logging and poaching.

Irene Wabiwa Betoko of Greenpeace Africa said the government had yet to prove it would use internatio­nal investment in its forests for the benefit of the Gabonese people.

“These forests are not empty. They belong to communitie­s,” she said.

‘The only way to save forests is to make them valuable. It’s a bigger picture than just Gabon’

‘We are doing this for us and for the rest of the world. Before, our natural resource was petrol, now it’s forest’

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Mamma Georgette, 55, with firewood and her daily harvest in Gabon; Lee White, the Gabon environmen­t minister; timber is extracted on a sustainabl­e basis
Clockwise from top: Mamma Georgette, 55, with firewood and her daily harvest in Gabon; Lee White, the Gabon environmen­t minister; timber is extracted on a sustainabl­e basis

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