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A Tropical Forest Is Being Razed Illegally, Greenpeace Says

A Tropical Forest Is Being Razed Illegally, Greenpeace Says

A company in Cameroon is illegally clearing land to start a giant oil-palm plantation encroaching on a key biodiversity zone in the Congo Basin, the world’s second-largest tropical forest, according to Greenpeace. The company rejected the allegations.

Cameroun Vert SARL, known as Camvert, this year began developing a 60,000 hectare (148,263-acre) palm-oil plantation in a forest previously earmarked for logging in the South Region of the country. Once completed, the project will be among the biggest palm-oil operations in central Africa and yield some 180,000 tons of the edible oil annually.

Part of the forest borders the Campo Ma’an National Park, home to threatened animals including giant pangolins, forest elephants, chimpanzees, lowland gorillas and leopards.

The forest was declassified and designated for commercial agriculture in November even though the environmental impact assessment hadn’t been completed, according to Greenpeace. In April, the Ministry of Domain and State Property authorized the company to start clearing 2,500 hectares.

The ministry didn’t immediately respond to queries.

A Tropical Forest Is Being Razed Illegally, Greenpeace Says

‘Usefulness Outlived’

The project violates both Cameroonian law and international standards and threatens the livelihood of indigenous communities, Greenpeace said in a report Monday. The ministry’s authorization was illegal in the absence of a presidential decree ceding the land to Camvert or a special presidential derogation, the environmental group said, describing the company’s 206-page Environmental and Social Impact Assessment as “a travesty of due diligence.”

Camvert rejected the allegations, saying the project “was created in full respect of national and international laws and after serious consultations with government administrations, environmental organizations and the local population,” according to Project Manager Officer Mamoudou Bobbo.

The forest has outlived its usefulness for the logging industry as it has been damaged, Bobbo said in an interview in the capital, Yaounde. “Oil palm trees are trees like any other and cannot affect the climate negatively as claimed by Greenpeace,” he said.

The company has reserved 10,000 of the 60,000 hectares as a “buffer zone for environmental equilibrium,” Bobbo said.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.