Congo Basin Rainforest Mapped for “Sustainable Logging;” Natives Assisting Project

Congo basin forest is biggest for approved logging
Tue May 27, 2008 4:01pm EDT 

OSLO (Reuters) – A tract of tropical forest in the Congo Basin mapped with the help of local pygmies has become the largest in the world certified under a system meant to ensure responsible logging, partners in the project said on Tuesday.

The 7,500 sq km (2,896 sq mile) concession area, almost the size of Cyprus or Puerto Rico, is operated by Congolaise Industrielle des Bois (CIB), a unit of Danish hardwood specialist DLH Group.

The area was the “largest ever tract of contiguous certified tropical forest in the world”, partners said in a statement after the forest won certification meant to avoid deforestation. It more than doubled an existing CIB concession.

“Timber production does not have to be synonymous with the destruction of tropical forests,” said Scott Poynton, executive director of the Tropical Forest Trust, a Geneva-based non-profit charity that works with industry to conserve forests.

Pygmies in Congo used GPS satellite handsets to pinpoint sacred sites on maps in the Pokola rainforest to ensure that they would be untouched by loggers.

“For instance, at a large Sapelli tree prized for its edible caterpillars, or an important collecting point for medicinal plants, they simply selected the appropriate icon and the GPS records the location,” the statement said.

The handheld mapping device “made it possible for the pygmy communities to communicate to us the specific forest resources that they hold sacred”, said Robert Hunink, executive vice president of DLH Group.

The area of forest received certification from the Forest Stewardship Council, an independent non-profit group which tries to set standards for logging companies to avoid deforestation.

Forests in the Congo Basin cover about 1.81 million sq km (700,000 square miles), making them second largest in the world after the Amazon.

But the Congo Basin forests lose about 40,000 square km every year “due to the effects of poverty, population increase, illegal logging, mining, poor forest management and conversion of forest land to agriculture”, the statement said.

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