3,000 hectares of Dja forest reserve destroyed

Cameroon Forest

Tue, 3 Mar 2015 Source: The Post Newspaper

More than 3,000 hectares of the rainforest bordering the Dja Faunal Reserve in the Chinese Hevea Sud Rubber area has been destroyed.

According to Greenpeace, an international environmental NGO, agro-business promoters are moving deeper into Cameroon’s forest as they calculate the gains they can make from either rubber or palm oil.


Looking at the future benefits in palms and rubber agro-industries, land is an essential commodity and the Cameroon is a good spot to open such plantations.


This area covers large portions of land and thus exploiting it can trigger consequences, ranging from encroachment on reserved forest areas, displacement of wildlife and forest communities and climate change.


Greenpeace has raised an alarm that agro-business companies are destroying vital rainforest habitat for chimpanzees and other great apes by their expansion of projects in Cameroon.


Besides this, the NGO said that there are indications that a Cameroon company, Azur, is targeting large portion of dense forest in the Littoral Region, (about 60,000 hectares) adjacent to the Ebo Forest and a proposed National Park harbouring many primates, to convert to oil palm.


These are not the only agro-industrial companies that are opening up large areas for oil palm. In the Southwest, Herakles requested for about 75,000 hectares of land for their palm plantation, though Government finally allocated just 20,000 hectares to them.

Dr. Joshua Linder, Assistant Professor of Anthropology at James Madison University, says, “Agro-industrial developments will soon emerge as a top threat to biodiversity in the African Tropical Forest Zone”.


To the Anthropologist; “If proactive strategies to mitigate the effects of large-scale habitat conversion are not soon implemented, we can expect a rapid decline in African primate diversity. In the forest sector, there are lots of projects in mining, logging and agro-business and, civil society proposes that Government should be watchful.


Greenpeace says industrial agricultural concessions owned by foreigners are allocated without proper land use planning.


In this vein, Messe Venant, Congo Basin Regional Representative of Forest Peoples and head of AKANI, a BAKA NGO based in Bertoua, indicates that Government, in giving out concessions, has to relocate the communities.


" What remain a challenge is the situation where there is land demarcation and business is going on but nothing is done for the people in the forest. To develop communities, they need to have land", the expert argued.


The consequence is that, besides social conflicts arising from clearing the forest due to lack of dialogue with the communities, there are negative ecological impacts, endangered wildlife species may overlap into forest areas with high biodiversity.

Against this backdrop, “Governments need to urgently develop a participatory land use planning process prior to the allocation of industrial concessions”, Irene Wabiwa, Greenpeace Forest Campaign Manager for Africa indicated.


Besides, experts say as the second largest rainforest in the world, the Congo Basin, which includes Cameroon forest, is rich in diverse ecosystems and conserving the ecosystem is vital for the fight against climate change.


According to Richard Eba'a Atyi, Coordinator for International Forestry Research Centre, CIFOR, for Central African Region, even though clearing for agriculture is not the biggest contributor compared to fossil fuel on forest degradation, it has the potential to increase emissions of carbon dioxide responsible for greenhouse gases leading to climate change.


In order to mitigate the effects there is need to plant trees and prevent deforestation, he said.

Source: The Post Newspaper