BFF-08 Gabon minister hails country’s responsiblity after historic forest deal

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GABON-NORWAY-CLIMATE-FORESTRY

Gabon minister hails country’s responsiblity after historic forest deal

NEW YORK, Sept 23, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Prevention is better than cure.

That’s the underlying philosophy of a new accord signed on Sunday between
Norway and Gabon, which will become the first African country paid to
preserve its forests in an effort to fight climate change.

“Norway is committing to compensating us for reducing emissions,” forestry
minister Lee White told AFP in an interview in New York, ahead of a UN
climate summit on Monday. The tropical forests of the Amazon, Equatorial
Africa, and Indonesia are the world’s major carbon sinks. Their trees and
vegetation absorb and trap carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, in colossal
quantities.

International attention is mainly focused on deforestation, such as in the
Amazon, but what about countries like Gabon, a former French colony which has
not succumbed to over-exploitation and is almost 90 percent covered by
forest?

According to the contract, Norway will pay Gabon $10 for every ton of
carbon not emitted, relative to the Central African country’s annual average
between 2005-2014, and up to a maximum payout of $150 million over ten years.

“They will pay us because we have not deforested, and because we’ve managed
logging responsibly, and reduced emissions linked to logging,” the British
and Gabonese national said, speaking in French.

Biologist White became a minister in June, having worked in Gabon for three
decades as an environmental campaigner, leading National Geographic to call
him a “real-life Tarzan.”

Gabon wants to keep exploiting its forests but in a way that is
sustainable, which White said is feasible.

Eighty percent of Gabon’s emissions are linked to exploitation of its
forests, he said.

Beyond their use for timber, trees are felled to make way for roads used by
trucks and for tracks used by bulldozers, while falling trees can damage or
destroy others on their way down.

“If we can reduce the width of roads, cut trees in a direction that
minimizes damage, reduce the size of bulldozer tracks, and boost forestry
rotation periods, we can take lots of steps to reduce emissions,” he said.

Norway won’t pay Gabon if it doesn’t deliver.

– Pangolin poaching –

Although $150 million is not a huge amount of money, “for me, what’s more
important is the principle,” said White.

The hope is that by agreeing to pay $10 per ton, Norway will push up the
global price of carbon.

Gabon is not exempt from scandals, such as one involving a huge, illegally
logged haul of kevazingo tropical hardwood, which led to the vice president
being sacked and White being appointed.

The highly expensive wood is used in furniture, especially in China.

Seized stocks will be auctioned off, said White, and he hopes to re-
authorize legal logging in 2020 or 2021. He believes current stocks will last
a year or two.

When it comes to wildlife, White is pleased that the country has
successfully curbed elephant poaching. After China’s 2017 decision to ban the
sale of ivory, its price in Gabon fell from 150 to 30 euros per kilogram, he
said.

“On elephants, we’ve made progress, but sadly, when it comes to pangolins,
the trade is going up.”

“Each time we shut a door, it seems like another one opens,” he added about
the scaled mammals, which are prized for their use in traditional Chinese
medicine.

“The price and quantity of pangolin scales being exported from Central
Africa are soaring,” he said.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0939 hrs