DRC : Deputy PM for Environment and Sustainable Development, CAFI and France via AFD launch the Sustainable Forest Management Programme

Group picture - launch of the PGDF - CAFI

Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo (December 6, 2022) – The Sustainable Forest Management Programme (Programme de Gestion Durable des Forêts in French, or PGDF) was officially launched in DRC yesterday by H.E. the Deputy Prime Minister in charge of the Environment and Sustainable Development Ms Eve Bazaiba in the presence of H.E. the French Ambassador Mr Bruno Aubert, Mr Lars Leymann, Deputy Head of Mission of the German Embassy on behalf of the Presidency of the Central African Forest Initiative (CAFI) and Ms Safia Ibrahim-Netter, Director of the French Development Agency (AFD) in the DRC. The programme, which aims to improve the governance of the forestry sector, features a main objective to support the definition of the DRC's forest policy based on broad consultations with stakeholders in the sector.

Comprising numerous objectives in terms of forestry, the PGDF aims to enable the country to manage forest resources sustainably through an inclusive process, particularly via the revitalisation of the National Advisory Council on Forests. It primarily intends to improve forest governance through the promotion of sustainable management methods for forest resources.

The CAFI Executive Board approved the programme in December 2019. The official signing of the PGDF took place in August 2022 as part of the grant agreement between AFD and the DRC Government.

H.E. the Deputy Prime Minister in charge of the Environment and Sustainable Development Ms Eve Bazaiba is fully invested in the progress of the programme, and recalled that: “...the forests of the DRC cover an area estimated at 155 million hectares, representing around 60% of the national territory and 10% of the world's tropical forests…this programme will also allow us to accelerate reforms on the protection, sustainable management and development of our forest resources.”

H.E. Mr Bruno Aubert, Ambassador of France to the DRC, added: “France intends to support the visibility and importance of the Congo Basin forests. I welcome the revitalisation of the National Forest Advisory Council (Conseil national consultatif in French), an inclusive body.”

According to Mr. Lars Leymann, Deputy Head of Mission of the German Embassy who chairs the CAFI until 2023, “All partners stand beside the government of DRC so that the policies and measures necessary to improve forest governance can make significant progress as from the first half of 2023, in accordance with the expressed wishes of H.E. President Felix Tshisekedi.”

The AFD, implementing partner for the PGDF, was represented by its Director in the DRC, Ms Safia Ibrahim-Netter, who declared: “We are proud of the commitment demonstrated by the DRC, which aims to find real solutions to sustainable development together, with all local actors and with all stakeholders.”

The next step for the PGDF is to help the Government develop a forest policy that involves all local actors, including the public and private sectors as well as civil society. The ambitious timetable aims to formally adopt such a policy within six months.

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About CAFI (cafi.org)

Supported by seven European countries, the Republic of Korea and the European Union, the Central African Forest Initiative (CAFI) is a United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund (MPTF) and policy dialogue platform that aims to support Central African countries in pursuing a low-emission development pathway that ensures economic growth and poverty reduction while protecting the forests and natural resources on which people depend. Home to more than 10,000 plant and animal species, many of them endemic, the Central African rainforest is an indispensable source of food, energy, shelter and spirituality in countries with some of the lowest human development indexes and the largest number of people in urgent need of food security assistance in the world. CAFI combines investments and high-level policy dialogue to help its six partner countries implement the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change, fight poverty and develop sustainably while being aligned with the post-2020 biodiversity framework.