The World Bank Condones Logging As a Potential Quick Fix ... in the Name of Development Carving up the Congo 11
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Bonobo (Pan Paniscus)
Bonobo (Pan paniscus) Conservation Strategy 2012–2022 About IUCN IUCN, International Union for Conservation of Nature, helps the world find pragmatic solutions to our most pressing environment and development challenges. IUCN’s work focuses on valuing and conserving nature, ensuring effective and equitable governance of its use, and deploying nature- based solutions to global challenges in climate, food and development. IUCN supports scientific research, manages field projects all over the world, and brings governments, NGOs, the UN and companies together to develop policy, laws and best practice. IUCN is the world’s oldest and largest global environmental organization, with more than 1,200 government and NGO Members and almost 11,000 volunteer experts in some 160 countries. IUCN’s work is supported by over 1,000 staff in 45 offices and hundreds of partners in public, NGO and private sectors around the world. IUCN Species Survival Commission The Species Survival Commission (SSC) is the largest of IUCN’s six volunteer commissions with a global membership of 8,000 experts. SSC advises IUCN and its members on the wide range of technical and scientific aspects of species conservation and is dedicated to securing a future for biodiversity. SSC has significant input into the international agreements dealing with biodiversity conservation. www.iucn.org/themes/ssc IUCN Species Programme The IUCN Species Programme supports the activities of the IUCN Species Survival Commission and individual Specialist Groups, as well as implementing global species conservation initiatives. It is an integral part of the IUCN Secretariat and is managed from IUCN’s international headquarters in Gland, Switzerland. -
Inventaire Rapide Des Zones Humides Représentatives En République Démocratique Du Congo
Inventaire Rapide des Zones Humides Représentatives en République Démocratique du Congo Editors and Major Contributors : Michele Thieme, Aurelie Shapiro, Alejandra Colom, Uli Schliewen, Nikolai Sindorf, Andre Kamdem Toham Supported by the Swiss Grant for Africa, Ramsar Convention Secretariat Table of Contents Executive Summary I. Introduction II. Approach and Methodology for Rapid Inventory of Wetland Priority Areas A. Aquatic Ecosystem Classification and Gap Analysis B. Human Use / Suitability Analysis C. Marxan Model D. Delineation and Prioritization of Wetland Areas E. Threats assessment, socio economic importance and key stakeholders Appendix I. Contributors Appendix II. List of Protected Areas used in the Gap Analysis Appendix III. Photos of Wetland Areas Appendix IV. List of Fish Species by Wetland Priority Area Executive Summary In 2002, the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo committed to increase its protected area coverage to 15% from just over 8%. WWF, RAMSAR, OSFAC and other partners supported the effort by convening an expert workshop in Kinshasa, DRC in November 2007, to undertake a country wide biodiversity assessment, including a rapid inventory and prioritization of the biodiversity value of the wetlands of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Several products were developed prior to the workshop to facilitate the work of the experts. These were: (1) a map classifying small sub‐basins in DRC by the predominant aquatic habitat types and (2) a map of human use/suitability. The aquatic habitat or ecosystem map was used as a basis for ensuring representation of all habitat types across the country and the suitability map provided a measure of the level of human impact. -
World Bank Document
RESTRICTED Report No. PA-118a Public Disclosure Authorized This report is for official use only by the Bank Group and specifically authorized organizations or persons. It may not be published, quoted or cited without Bank Group authorization. The Rank Group dosnot acenp resnonshibiliy for the ---ray orcr.ltn f th rpot INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENr INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION Public Disclosure Authorized AGRICULTURAL SECTOR SURVEY REPUBLIC OF ZAIRE (in three volumes) VOLUME II Public Disclosure Authorized ANNEXES 1 THROUGH 6 June 19, 1972 Public Disclosure Authorized Aogri niut ulr P =lnt-r DoTpon rtment BACKGROUND DATA US$1 = 0.5 zaires (Z) or i0 ri-La'ruta (1x) One zaire = 2.0 US$ Total Land Area 234.5 million ha (905,000 square miles) of which (i) Forests 102.3 million ha (ii) Cultivated land 2.3 million ha (iii) Permanent pasture 2.3 million ha (iv) Savannahs, mountains, rivers and lakes 127.6 million ha Population (Official estimate, 1970) 21.6 million Distribution: Rural 70% : Urban 30% Annual rate of growth, 1958-70: 3.9% Gross Domestic Product Total, 1970 (est.) Z 1,014 million (US$2,028 million) Per canita. 1970 (est.): Z 47 (US$94) Agricultural output as % of GDP, 1969: 18% Commercialized production: 10% Subsistence production: 8% Agricultural Exports and Imports Value of Agricultural Exports, 1969: US$97 million Share of Total Exports: 14.5% Principal export products: palm oil, coffee, rubber, wood products, tea Value of Agricultural Imports, 1968: US$56 million Share of Total Imports: 11% Principal imports: cereals, fish and fish products, meat and dairy products, fruit and vegetables, tobacco Cnn9u.mpr Prrire Index (IRES - Kinsghaa) June 1970 (June 1960 = 100) 1,454 GENER.AL NOTE ON DATA The statistical data available on most facets of the economy and population of the Republic of Zaire are quite unreliable for the post--Independence periods -- a fact which official publications readily acknowledge. -
Water Level Fluctuations in the Congo Basin Derived from ENVISAT Satellite Altimetry
Remote Sens. 2014, 6, 9340-9358; doi:10.3390/rs6109340 OPEN ACCESS remote sensing ISSN 2072-4292 www.mdpi.com/journal/remotesensing Article Water Level Fluctuations in the Congo Basin Derived from ENVISAT Satellite Altimetry Mélanie Becker 1,*, Joecila Santos da Silva 2, Stéphane Calmant 3, Vivien Robinet 1, Laurent Linguet 1 and Frédérique Seyler 4 1 UAG/ESPACE-DEV, Route de Montabo, Cayenne 97300, French Guiana; E-Mails: [email protected] (V.R.); [email protected] (L.L.) 2 UEA/CESTU, Av. Djalma Batista 3578, Manaus 69058-807, Brazil; E-Mail: [email protected] 3 IRD/LEGOS, 14 Av. Edouard Belin, Toulouse 31400, France; E-Mail: [email protected] 4 IRD/ESPACE-DEV, Route de Montabo, Cayenne 97300, French Guiana; E-Mail: [email protected] * Author to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mail: [email protected]; Tel.: +594-(0)-594-299-277; Fax: +594-(0)-594-319-855. External Editors: Benjamin Koetz, Zoltan Vekerdy, Massimo Menenti, Diego Fernández-Prieto, Richard Gloaguen, Prasad S. Thenkabail Received: 16 May 2014; in revised form: 4 September 2014 / Accepted: 10 September 2014 / Published: 29 September 2014 Abstract: In the Congo Basin, the elevated vulnerability of food security and the water supply implies that sustainable development strategies must incorporate the effects of climate change on hydrological regimes. However, the lack of observational hydro-climatic data over the past decades strongly limits the number of studies investigating the effects of climate change in the Congo Basin. We present the largest altimetry-based dataset of water levels ever constituted over the entire Congo Basin. -
Geo-Data: the World Geographical Encyclopedia
Geodata.book Page iv Tuesday, October 15, 2002 8:25 AM GEO-DATA: THE WORLD GEOGRAPHICAL ENCYCLOPEDIA Project Editor Imaging and Multimedia Manufacturing John F. McCoy Randy Bassett, Christine O'Bryan, Barbara J. Nekita McKee Yarrow Editorial Mary Rose Bonk, Pamela A. Dear, Rachel J. Project Design Kain, Lynn U. Koch, Michael D. Lesniak, Nancy Cindy Baldwin, Tracey Rowens Matuszak, Michael T. Reade © 2002 by Gale. Gale is an imprint of The Gale For permission to use material from this prod- Since this page cannot legibly accommodate Group, Inc., a division of Thomson Learning, uct, submit your request via Web at http:// all copyright notices, the acknowledgements Inc. www.gale-edit.com/permissions, or you may constitute an extension of this copyright download our Permissions Request form and notice. Gale and Design™ and Thomson Learning™ submit your request by fax or mail to: are trademarks used herein under license. While every effort has been made to ensure Permissions Department the reliability of the information presented in For more information contact The Gale Group, Inc. this publication, The Gale Group, Inc. does The Gale Group, Inc. 27500 Drake Rd. not guarantee the accuracy of the data con- 27500 Drake Rd. Farmington Hills, MI 48331–3535 tained herein. The Gale Group, Inc. accepts no Farmington Hills, MI 48331–3535 Permissions Hotline: payment for listing; and inclusion in the pub- Or you can visit our Internet site at 248–699–8006 or 800–877–4253; ext. 8006 lication of any organization, agency, institu- http://www.gale.com Fax: 248–699–8074 or 800–762–4058 tion, publication, service, or individual does not imply endorsement of the editors or pub- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Cover photographs reproduced by permission No part of this work covered by the copyright lisher. -
Class G Tables of Geographic Cutter Numbers: Maps -- by Region Or Country -- Eastern Hemisphere -- Africa
G8202 AFRICA. REGIONS, NATURAL FEATURES, ETC. G8202 .C5 Chad, Lake .N5 Nile River .N9 Nyasa, Lake .R8 Ruzizi River .S2 Sahara .S9 Sudan [Region] .T3 Tanganyika, Lake .T5 Tibesti Mountains .Z3 Zambezi River 2717 G8222 NORTH AFRICA. REGIONS, NATURAL FEATURES, G8222 ETC. .A8 Atlas Mountains 2718 G8232 MOROCCO. REGIONS, NATURAL FEATURES, ETC. G8232 .A5 Anti-Atlas Mountains .B3 Beni Amir .B4 Beni Mhammed .C5 Chaouia region .C6 Coasts .D7 Dra region .F48 Fezouata .G4 Gharb Plain .H5 High Atlas Mountains .I3 Ifni .K4 Kert Wadi .K82 Ktaoua .M5 Middle Atlas Mountains .M6 Mogador Bay .R5 Rif Mountains .S2 Sais Plain .S38 Sebou River .S4 Sehoul Forest .S59 Sidi Yahia az Za region .T2 Tafilalt .T27 Tangier, Bay of .T3 Tangier Peninsula .T47 Ternata .T6 Toubkal Mountain 2719 G8233 MOROCCO. PROVINCES G8233 .A2 Agadir .A3 Al-Homina .A4 Al-Jadida .B3 Beni-Mellal .F4 Fès .K6 Khouribga .K8 Ksar-es-Souk .M2 Marrakech .M4 Meknès .N2 Nador .O8 Ouarzazate .O9 Oujda .R2 Rabat .S2 Safi .S5 Settat .T2 Tangier Including the International Zone .T25 Tarfaya .T4 Taza .T5 Tetuan 2720 G8234 MOROCCO. CITIES AND TOWNS, ETC. G8234 .A2 Agadir .A3 Alcazarquivir .A5 Amizmiz .A7 Arzila .A75 Asilah .A8 Azemmour .A9 Azrou .B2 Ben Ahmet .B35 Ben Slimane .B37 Beni Mellal .B4 Berkane .B52 Berrechid .B6 Boujad .C3 Casablanca .C4 Ceuta .C5 Checkaouene [Tétouan] .D4 Demnate .E7 Erfond .E8 Essaouira .F3 Fedhala .F4 Fès .F5 Figurg .G8 Guercif .H3 Hajeb [Meknès] .H6 Hoceima .I3 Ifrane [Meknès] .J3 Jadida .K3 Kasba-Tadla .K37 Kelaa des Srarhna .K4 Kenitra .K43 Khenitra .K5 Khmissat .K6 Khouribga .L3 Larache .M2 Marrakech .M3 Mazagan .M38 Medina .M4 Meknès .M5 Melilla .M55 Midar .M7 Mogador .M75 Mohammedia .N3 Nador [Nador] .O7 Oued Zem .O9 Oujda .P4 Petitjean .P6 Port-Lyantey 2721 G8234 MOROCCO. -
The Status and Distribution of Freshwater Biodiversity in Central Africa
THE S THE STATUS AND DISTRIBUTION T A OF FRESHWATER BIODIVERSITY T U S IN CENTRAL AFRICA AND Brooks, E.G.E., Allen, D.J. and Darwall, W.R.T. D I st RIBU T ION OF F RE S HWA T ER B IODIVER S I T Y IN CEN CENTRAL AFRICA CENTRAL T RAL AFRICA INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR CONSERVATION OF NATURE WORLD HEADQUARTERS Rue Mauverney 28 1196 Gland Switzerland Tel: + 41 22 999 0000 Fax: + 41 22 999 0020 www.iucn.org/species www.iucnredlist.org The IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM Regional Assessment About IUCN IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ – Regional Assessment IUCN, International Union for Conservation of Nature, helps the world find pragmatic solutions to our most pressing environment and development Africa challenges. The Status and Distribution of Freshwater Biodiversity in Eastern Africa. Compiled by William R.T. Darwall, Kevin IUCN works on biodiversity, climate change, energy, human livelihoods and greening the world economy by supporting scientific research, managing G. Smith, Thomas Lowe and Jean-Christophe Vié, 2005. field projects all over the world, and bringing governments, NGOs, the UN and companies together to develop policy, laws and best practice. The Status and Distribution of Freshwater Biodiversity in Southern Africa. Compiled by William R.T. Darwall, IUCN is the world’s oldest and largest global environmental organization, Kevin G. Smith, Denis Tweddle and Paul Skelton, 2009. with more than 1,000 government and NGO members and almost 11,000 volunteer experts in some 160 countries. IUCN’s work is supported by over The Status and Distribution of Freshwater Biodiversity in Western Africa. -
4.8 Democratic Republic of Congo Transporter Contact List
4.8 Democratic Republic of Congo Transporter Contact List Company Location Physical Address Name Email Phone Description of Services Website (s) Number Provided (office) Kananga Av. Des Cadets, Q Kasonga (0)81933285 | (0)971040560 SNCC /Kamayi Kitenge Kananga Ilunga GTM Ntambwe Kananga CRND Kananga ETS LOFILS Kananga ETS ASPHAR Kananga ETS REHOBOTH Kananga Rond-Point Immo Stani MONA LUXE SARL kasaï, Blv Lumumba, C muela /Kananga Kananga Maman Maman Bébé Bébé Kananga Bruno Bruno Kananga Bufalo Bufalo Kananga Av Du Commerce n°1, KAPUTA KAPUTA WA Q/ Industriel, C/ WA KAPUTA Mico Kananga KAPUTA Mico Kananga Charles SAM BILANGA SPRL Kamba se Tshikapa C/Dibumba Gustave [email protected] E Les Exploits de Kany Dieu Kinshasa ADO [email protected] 999958811 ELIOS BUSINESS Road transport LONGO CENTER Kinshasa PRINCE [email protected] 999984530 TRANSBOOM Road transport LONGAYO Kinshasa BIENVENU [email protected] 810741899 ETS MWANA MAY Road transport MWANAM AY Kinshasa DAVID [email protected] 0998768978 LOFILS Road transport OMALANGA /0814950638 Kinshasa SYLVAIN [email protected] 997339493 ETS NZUKA Road transport ANGANDA /998500034 /810393539 Kinshasa SERGE [email protected] 0815008599 EBAMU Road transport KONGOLO /09973893202 /0813974889 Kinshasa MARCEL [email protected] 0994892495 KABONGO NSENDA Road transport KABONGO /09976604415 /0994901506 /0825080531 Kinshasa SERGE [email protected] 243813023014/ N&N PARTNERS Road transport MUHIMA Kinshasa SERGE [email protected] 0999752233 ETS -
The Forests of the Congo Basin – State of the Forest 2013
THE FORESTS OF THE CONGO BASIN State of the Forest 2013 The Forests of the Congo Basin – State of the Forest 2013 Editors : de Wasseige C., Flynn J., Louppe D., Hiol Hiol F., Mayaux Ph. Cover picture: Forest track in Central African Republic. © Didier Hubert The State of the Forest 2013 report is a publication of the Observatoire des Forêts d’Afrique centrale of the Commission des Forêts d’Afrique centrale (OFAC/COMIFAC) and the Congo Basin Forest Partnership (CBFP). http://www.observatoire-comifac.net/ - http://comifac.org/ - http://pfbc-cbfp.org/ Unless stated otherwise, administrative limits and other map contents do not presume any official approbation. Unless stated otherwise, the data, analysis and conclusions presented in this book are those of the respective authors. All images are subjected to copyright. Any reproduction in print, electronic or any other form is prohibited without the express prior written consent of the copyright owner. The required citation is : The Forests of the Congo Basin - State of the Forest 2013. Eds : de Wasseige C., Flynn J., Louppe D., Hiol Hiol F., Mayaux Ph. – 2014. Weyrich. Belgium. 328 p. Legal deposit : D/2014/8631/42 ISBN : 978-2-87489-299-8 Reproduction is authorized provided the source is acknowledged. © 2014 EDITION-PRODUCTION All rights reserved for all countries. © Published in Belgium by WEYRICH ÉDITION 6840 Neufchâteau – 061 27 94 30 www.weyrich-edition.be Printed in Belgium : Antilope Printing - Lier Printed on recycled paper THE FORESTS OF THE CONGO BASIN State of the Forest 2013 TABLE -
Petroleum Potential of the Congo Basin 18 Damien Delvaux and Max Fernandez-Alonso
Petroleum Potential of the Congo Basin 18 Damien Delvaux and Max Fernandez-Alonso 18.1 Introduction (e.g. Daly et al. 1992). This caused depositional hiatus, uplift and erosion periods, faulting and folding, leading to the The Congo Basin (CB) is a broad and long-lived intra- development of stratigraphic and tectonic unconformities cratonic depression in the centre of the African Plate cover- (e.g. Kadima et al., Chap. 6, and Linol et al., Chap. 11, ing most of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC, this Book). formerly Zaire), the People’s Republic of Congo and the Although the petroleum potential of this ca. 1.2 million Central African Republic (CAR), coinciding with a region km2 intra-continental basin has been of interest for decades of pronounced long-wavelength gravity anomaly (Crosby (Misser 2013), the CB is still one of the largest, least well- et al. 2010; see also Raveloson et al., Chap. 1, this Book). understood basin in the world due to relatively limited obser- The CB has a long (~600 Ma) and complex history of vational data. Only two stratigraphic wells and two deep sediment accumulation, tectonic inversion and erosion petroleum wells have been drilled since exploration began since the end-Neoproterozoic (Veatch 1935; Cahen 1954; in the 1950s. Many important aspects of its geological knowl- Cahen and Lepersonne 1954; Lepersonne 1974, 1977; Daly edge and petroleum systems remain poorly constrained, such et al. 1992; Giresse 2005; Kadima et al. 2011a; see also as: its regional tectonic framework and internal structure, the Kadima et al., Chap. 6, this Book), and it was affected by stratigraphy of the basin fill, potential source rock levels, the break-up of Gondwana during the Mesozoic (Torsvik reservoirs and seal facies, its burial and thermal history, and and Cocks 2011; see also Linol, Chap. -
Abyssinia 57, 72, 118; PI. 10 Adigrat Sandstones 72 African Geological
INDEX Abyssinia 57, 72, 118; PI. 10 Borges, A. 14, 16, 21, 40, 74, 146, 165 Adigrat sandstones 72 "Botletle Schichen" (Kalahari) 27 African Geological Surveys (1931) 72 Boutakoff, N. 116, 120, 121, 122, 124, 152, Albert Nyanza: see Lake Albert 165, 166; PI. 8 (115) Albertville, Belgian Congo 86, 102, 121; Pis. Brazil 156; fig. 8 (149) 1, 7 (91), PI. 10 Brazzaville, French Equatorial Africa 65; Amazon Basin 157; flg. 8 (149) Pl. 1 ancient rivers: see Triassic Brien, V. 28, 166 Andrada Post, Angola 36, 56; flgs. 3 (54), Brito Godins, Angola 142, 143; flg. 7 (138) 4 (55) Bulawayo, Southern Rhodesia 28 Andrew, A. R. 137, 165 Bungongo, Belgian Congo 132, 133; Pl. 1 Andrews, C. W. 24, 165 Bushimaie diamond fields 9, 158, 159 Angola 1, 2, 10, 14, 21, 23, 28, 29, 30, 31, 83, Triassie rivers of 57-61, 144, 153; PI. 5 (60) 88, 40, 43, 50, 53, 56, 70, 139-146, 153 Bushimaie region, Belgian Congo 62, 65, 71, 161, 163; flgs. 3 (54), 7 (138); Pi. 1 158, 159 — coastal plain 29 — River, 45, 46, 58, 59, 69, 90, 159; PI. 2 — diamond fields 2, 53; see Kasai-Lunda Bushveld amygdaloid basalts (Transvaal) Antarctic continent 7, 155 74; PI. 9 Aptian 29, 30, 68 — intrusion 159 Arctic regions 118 Busindi Fault, Belgian Congo 109; PI. 7 (91) Argentina 157; fig. 8 (149) Buta, Belgian Congo 122, 133, 135; Pis. 1, 10 arid to semi-arid climate Buttgenbach, H. 82, 83, 166 poorly sorted deposits 5, 11, 29, 47, 48, 50, 54, 57-58, 71, 86, 151, 158, 163 Cabatuquila, Angola 142; flg. -
Regional Geology Reviews
Regional Geology Reviews Series Editors Roland Oberha¨nsli Maarten J. de Wit Franc¸ois M. Roure More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/8643 . Maarten J. de Wit • Franc¸ois Guillocheau • Michiel C.J. de Wit Editors Geology and Resource Potential of the Congo Basin Editors Maarten J. de Wit Franc¸ois Guillocheau AEON- Africa Earth Observatory Geosciences Network, and ESSRI - Earth University of Rennes Stewardship Science Research Institute Rennes Cedex Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University France Port Elizabeth South Africa Michiel C.J. de Wit Geology University of Pretoria Pretoria South Africa ISBN 978-3-642-29481-5 ISBN 978-3-642-29482-2 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-29482-2 Springer Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London Library of Congress Control Number: 2014959861 # Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2015 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. Exempted from this legal reservation are brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis or material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Copyright Law of the Publisher’s location, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer.