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Civil society groups slam DRC Government over latest oil exploration plan in protected areas

The government of the  Democratic Republic of Congo has been called out for its latest attempt for oil exploration in protected areas. Minister for Hydrocarbons, Rubens Mikindo Muhima, had, earlier this week,commissioned geological studies for 16 oil and three gas blocks in the DRC as a precursor to the awarding of tenders for exploration and exploitation.

In his speech , Minister Muhima affirmed his belief that fossil fuels alone can revolutionize the economy of DRC.

However, in reaction to these developments, Ephrem Bwishe, an activist in the country , said: “This newest decision by DRC to undertake exploration of oil and gas is a threat to Salonga and Virunga Parks, which are UNESCO World Heritage sites and home to the critically-endangered mountain gorillas and many other endemic species.”

Bwishe maintained that “As we have seen in other countries, oil and gas exploration won’t
directly benefit the local communities and will instead impoverish these people who depend on fisheries, farming and tourism. ”

He said: “As a citizen of DRC, I call on President Tshisekedi and his Government to cancel any oil exploration contracts signed in the past, and not undertake any future oil exploration activities in the protected areas. The government is an ally of its citizens and should act in their interests to protect and create opportunities that benefit the community’s livelihood and preserve the natural resources in the region.”

Also condemning the developnent, Landry Ninteretse, Africa Team Leader at 350.org, said, “DRC has an abundance of natural resources that it can exploit to meet its economic and development ambitions. Virunga and Salonga National Parks host many of these oil and gas blocks, meaning that DRC could effectively stand to lose the outstanding universal value and significant income derived from these two protected areas. No oil exploration or extraction should happen in such fragile ecosystems where people have been living in harmony with nature for centuries.

” We thus call on the DRC government to reconsider oil and gas exploration and instead focus on the more viable income opportunities available in the country such as tourism, mining and agriculture.”

Recall that on May 8, 2020, Minister Muhima presented the inventory of the oil and gas potential in the DRC and the Cabinet adopted a selection of 16 oil and three gas blocks, mostly in protected areas to undergo a tendering process that will culminate in the allocation of hydrocarbon rights.

Virunga and Salonga Parks have outstanding universal value, listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1979 and 1984, they play host to 43 per cent of Africa’s bird species, 27 per cent of African mammals and more than 10 per cent of these
reptiles, amphibians, medicinal plants and several other rare endangered species that do not exist anywhere else in the world.

This rich biodiversity that supports the livelihoods of millions of people is now being threatened by a series of licenses for oil exploration by the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo, through the Ministry of Hydrocarbons.

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