logo
Fears for crucial gorilla habitats as pristine forests are opened to bids for oil and gas drilling in the Democratic Republic of Congo

Fears for crucial gorilla habitats as pristine forests are opened to bids for oil and gas drilling in the Democratic Republic of Congo

Daily Mail​2 days ago
The Democratic Republic of the Congo is opening untouched forest land and gorilla habitats to oil and gas firm for drilling, with an aim to allow resource exploitation on half the country.
The DRC's government has opened 306million acres of land and inland water, described as the 'world's worst place to prospect for oil', for auction, splitting the vast swathe of land up into 52 blocks.
According to Earth Insight, a research group, 64% of the area that is set to be exploited is intact tropical forest, and experts have warned that the DRC's government's move stands at odds with its commitments to protect biodiversity.
The DRC's ancient forests are home to several endangered species, including gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobo apes and okapis, otherwise known as forest giraffes.
And the area that is being flogged off to oil firms is home to 39million people, including many Indigenous people who often rely on clean and healthy forest and river lands to survive.
Pascal Mirindi, campaign coordinator for Notre Terre Sans Pétrole, a group campaigning to prevent resource exploitation in the DRC, said: 'Imagine: 39 million Congolese people … and 64% of our forests could be directly affected by the awarding of these oil blocks.
'Where is the logic? Where is the coherence? We are reminding our leaders that the Congolese people are the primary sovereign. We will not remain silent while certain people organise themselves to sell off our future.'
It comes just a few years after a failed attempt to launch tenders for dozens of oil and gas blocks across the African nation that was cancelled due to late submissions and a lack of competition, according to the government.
Professor Simon Lewis from University College London, who led the team that first mapped the central Congo peatlands, said: 'The world's worst place to prospect for oil is up for auction, again.'
He said: 'No credible company would bid for oil in the DRC's forests and peatlands, as there is probably not enough oil to be commercially viable, and it will be expensive oil in financial, social and environmental costs.'
Despite the DRC announcing a flagship conservation initiative that aimed to protect vast amounts of the country, 72% of this area overlaps with the planned oil blocks.
Earth Insight has called for the DRC to call off the latest oil and gas tenders, and to invest in alternative means of energy production.
Anna Bebbington, a research manager at Earth Insight, said: 'Oil and gas development in these fragile ecosystems would have devastating impacts on biodiversity, communities, land rights and the global fight against climate change.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rwanda, Congo hold first meeting of joint oversight committee under peace deal
Rwanda, Congo hold first meeting of joint oversight committee under peace deal

Reuters

time3 hours ago

  • Reuters

Rwanda, Congo hold first meeting of joint oversight committee under peace deal

July 31 (Reuters) - Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo held the first meeting of a joint oversight committee on Thursday, taking a step toward implementing a peace deal agreed last month in Washington even as other commitments are yet to be fulfilled. The African Union, Qatar and the United States joined the meeting of the committee in Washington, which was established as a forum to deal with implementation and dispute resolution of the peace agreement. The deal in June between Rwanda and Congo marked a breakthrough in talks held by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration, which aims to bring an end to fighting that has killed thousands and attracted billions of dollars of Western investment to a region rich in tantalum, gold, cobalt, copper, lithium and other minerals. In the Washington agreement, the two African countries pledged to implement a 2024 deal that would see Rwandan troops withdraw from eastern Congo within 90 days. It also said Congo and Rwanda would form a joint security coordination mechanism within 30 days and implement a plan agreed last year to monitor and verify the withdrawal of Rwandan soldiers within three months. Congolese military operations targeting the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a Congo-based armed group that includes remnants of Rwanda's former army and militias that carried out a 1994 genocide, are meant to conclude over the same timeframe. But 30 days from the signing has passed without a meeting of the joint security coordination mechanism, and operations targeting the FDLR and the withdrawal of Rwandan soldiers have yet to begin. The joint oversight committee meeting, due to meet within 45 days of the signing, was on schedule. Trump's senior Africa adviser, Massad Boulos, told reporters on Wednesday that the deal was not off track, adding that a meeting of the security mechanism was due to be announced in coming days. Asked about lack of progress on operations against the FDLR and withdrawal of Rwandan soldiers, Boulos said: "There was no timeline for that... if you look at the chronology of what we've been able to do since April, it's been extensive, and it's been very much on point and very much in line with our aspirations. So it's not off track in any way." But sources with knowledge of the negotiations recognised delays in the implementation of the deal, but added it was not yet threatening the deal as a whole. Military and diplomatic sources told Reuters that the parties in conflict, including armed groups as M23 and militia fighters known as Wazalendo, have strengthened their military presence on the front lines.

British steelmakers boosted by change to EU tariffs
British steelmakers boosted by change to EU tariffs

North Wales Chronicle

time3 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

British steelmakers boosted by change to EU tariffs

The EU has agreed to more than double the UK's tariff-free quota for certain steel products in a move the Government described as a 'direct win' from Sir Keir Starmer's deal with the bloc earlier this year. At May's UK-EU summit, Sir Keir and European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen agreed to restore Britain's steel quotas to historic levels after they were slashed in March. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said the announcement was 'yet another positive step forward for the UK steel sector' that would give producers 'certainty'. The agreement comes at a difficult time for the industry, which continues to face 25% tariffs on exports to the US. An agreement with President Donald Trump to effectively reduce those tariffs to zero is yet to come into effect, but Britain has been protected from the 50% tariff Mr Trump imposed on steel from the rest of the world last month. UK Steel director general Gareth Stace said Friday's change was 'excellent news' for the sector that had been 'plagued by problems' in exporting steel to the EU. He added: 'The quota will restore historic trade flows and is good news for both UK steelmakers and their EU customers.' The decision means the UK can export 27,000 tonnes of 'category 17' steel – which includes angles and sections of steel – to the EU each quarter without paying tariffs. The figure had been cut to 10,000 tonnes after the EU introduced a cap intended to prevent a single exporter dominating the market. In total, the UK exports around 2.4 million tonnes of steel to the EU, worth nearly £3 billion and accounting for 75% of British steel exports. Ministers expect the change to help protect jobs in the industry, which has been a priority for the Labour Government since coming to power. In April, the Government used an almost unprecedented weekend recall of Parliament to take control of British Steel to prevent the shutdown of its blast furnaces and maintain the UK's primary steel-making capacity. British Steel's interim chief operating officer Lisa Coulson said: 'The removal of EU tariffs on British-made steel is a significant boost to our business. 'The EU is an important market to us, particularly for the products our highly skilled colleagues manufacture in Scunthorpe, Teesside, and Skinningrove.' But Conservative shadow business secretary Andrew Griffith described the quota as 'tiny' and 'embarrassing from a Government which has nothing to show on removing the US tariffs on steel which the PM claimed to have delivered back in May'. He added: 'It's a paltry return for giving up 12 years of fishing rights and tying the energy costs of every business to a higher cost EU emissions regime over which the UK will have no say. 'When Labour nationalised British Steel we said they had no plan. This government by press release shows we were right.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store