The outlook
With human populations growing at 2% to 3% and subsistence agriculture still the main source of food and income for most people in the Congo River Basin, habitat loss, bushmeat trade and climate change are likely to be the most significant long-term threats to biodiversity.Continuing global demand for the timber resources of the region's forests will also make conservation efforts particularly challenging.
How the problems started
To understand the situation in today’s Congo River Basin, one must go back in time to the era of foreign colonization. When the region’s countries gained their independence, the colonial powers in Central Africa left an unstable and flawed foundation upon which to build modern states.Economic structures favoured foreign investment, particularly in the extractive industry, and little had been achieved to empower and build the capacity of citizens.
The political division of African territories may have facilitated resource extraction and tax collection, but it also seriously disrupted traditional governance, land use, trade networks and population movements.2
The situation now
Today, environmental issues are just one of the items on the ‘to-do’ list of several Congo River Basin countries. Better education and infrastructure, employment opportunities, improved public services, more foreign investments are some of the many priorities vying for support.Clearly, environmental concerns need to be well integrated in all of these areas if they are to be successful.
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1Cleaver et al. 1992. Conservation of West and Central African Rainforests. The World Bank Environment Paper Number 1, in cooperation with IUCN. Washington DC.
2 CARPE. 2001. Central Africa and Forest Governance Counter-Balancing the Powers of Public and Private Sectors. Congo River Basin Information Series. Issue Brief #11.
