Rainforest reserve may be opened in Congo oil search
KINSHASA (Bloomberg) -- The Democratic Republic of Congo is considering whether to open up swathes of two world-famous national parks to oil exploration.
A decision to allow a search for crude may affect Virunga National Park, home to many of the about 1,000 mountain gorillas still alive, and Salonga National Park, the world’s second-biggest tropical rainforest reserve. A committee is being established to debate the proposal as Congo plans to increase crude output from the 25,000 bpd it produces from aging oil blocks along the Atlantic Ocean coast.
“We are in the middle of putting together this inter-institutional commission,” Emmanuel Kayumba, chief of staff in Congo’s Oil Ministry, said in an interview in the capital, Kinshasa.
According to the Nairobi-based African Wildlife Foundation, Mountain gorillas are endangered. They’re mainly found in eastern Congo, along with neighboring Uganda and Rwanda, where they serve as an attraction for tourists who pay to trek into forests to view the apes.
Protected areas
The ministry is recruiting members from the presidency, parliament and the government, as well as civil society organizations, Kayumba said. The commission will recommend whether or not the authorities should press ahead with shrinking the two parks to permit E&P in areas that are currently protected, Kayumba said.
In February, President Joseph Kabila approved a production-sharing contract between the state and closely held Compagnie Miniere Congolaise SPRL, or Comico, for three oil blocks in the Cuvette Centrale region. Sections of the permits border on Salonga, while part of one license is inside the park’s perimeter.
In Congo’s east, two unallocated concessions are either entirely or partly inside Virunga’s borders. London-based Soco International Plc gave up one of the permits (Block 5) in 2015, under pressure from environmental groups.
“The DRC is committed to not carrying out any oil exploration or production in protected areas,” Kayumba said. “Even if the commission comes to a conclusion that we can explore or produce oil, we will do it in respect of the laws and regulations in force, whether local or international.”
Public inquiry
Any decision to change the classification of parts of Virunga and Salonga would have to be supported by an environmental audit and a public inquiry before the Congolese cabinet could approve it, according to Kayumba. “It’s a long procedure,” he said.
Congo has long planned to boost production by issuing licenses in the center and east of the country and passed a new oil law in 2015, but progress has been slow. Oil Minister Aime Ngoy Mukena submitted a briefing to the government in late March concerning potential oil exploration in areas presently within the two parks.
Mukena asked the government to allow him to establish the commission to study the potential declassification of about 15,000 km2 (5,792 mi2), or approximately 40%, of Salonga and about 1,700 km2, or 22%, of Virunga, according to the briefing.
Congo’s cabinet decided on June 8 “to accept the minister’s proposal to create an inter-institutional commission,” Kayumba said. The ministry has already contacted the World Wildlife Fund, which co-manages Salonga, and the Wildlife Conservation Society, which supports both parks, about participating, he said.
Virunga Licenses The WWF hasn’t been contacted by the Oil Ministry and is still awaiting an invitation to contribute to the commission, its spokesman in Congo Dandy Yela said by text message. The WCS and Virunga’s management did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
While companies, whose names Kayumba declined to make public, have expressed interest in the licenses inside Virunga, the government will resolve the question of declassification before issuing the permits, he said.
Scientists recently discovered the world’s largest tropical peatlands in the Cuvette Centrale and say billions of tons of carbon dioxide could be released if they are destroyed. “We will take into account the presence of the peatlands in all our hydrocarbons work,” Kayumba said.