Commentary by Bart Crezee
- In 2017, researchers reported the existence of the largest tropical peatland complex in the world in the Congo Basin.
- In early 2018, a team of scientists, including the author, traveled to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to probe deeper into the peatlands, which cover an area about the size of England and hold some 30 billion tons of carbon.
- Around the same time, the DRC government has awarded logging concessions that overlap with the peatlands, in violation of a 16-year-old moratorium on logging.
- This post is a commentary. The views expressed are those of the author, not necessarily Mongabay.
LOKOLAMA, Democratic Republic of Congo — Sometime in March, I found myself trudging forward in a remote swamp in the heart of the Congo rainforest. As I worriedly tried to keep my boots from getting sucked in by the soft, brown mud, I wondered how far we could go on. It was our final day. In the two weeks prior, our team of British and Congolese researchers, together with men from the local village of Lokolama, had cut a 4-kilometer (2.5-mile) trail into this dense, swampy forest. It had proved to be painstakingly slow work. Some days were spent walking up and down the trail for up to eight hours, which only left us with a few hours of sunlight to actually work. But that day, upon reaching the furthest point yet, we tried to push for a few hundred meters more with the little light that was left — all to answer one big question: How much mud were we actually walking on?
Lokolama, a small, remote village in the Équateur province of northwestern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC),
At the University of Leeds, we wondered whether these discoveries were just the beginning. If we could already find 3 meters of peat just inside the forest, how much more could we find deep in the swamp’s interior? So earlier this year, we returned for three months of fieldwork, probing farther into the peatland than before. Already after 1 kilometer (0.6 miles), we measured 4.5 meters (15 feet) of peat. Four kilometers down the trail, our measurements had plumbed to more than 5 meters (16.5 feet). And when we added those last few hundred meters on our final day in the swamp, we found possibly 6 meters (19.5 feet) of peat underground.
I say possibly because, to know the exact peat depths, we need to await ongoing laboratory analysis of peat samples that we brought back to the U.K. But what we do know so far is that this peatland in the DRC becomes much deeper, much quicker than across the border in the Republic of Congo. This is crucial information because it means that the peatland might hold even more carbon than previously thought.
Exactly how much carbon depends on the full extent of the peatland. To get a better idea of the peatland’s distribution, we also visited three other locations in the DRC, spread out along several eastern tributaries of the Congo River. Up to that point, only large peat basins in between the bigger rivers had been studied. We found that in the DRC, extensive peat deposits that reach to a depth of at least 4 meters (13 feet) exist in the river floodplains as well. At all the sites that we visited, we found peat exactly where it was predicted to be by the 2017 Nature study. Some of these sites were dozens of kilometers away from Lokolama and hundreds of kilometers away from the initial research sites in the Republic of Congo, leaving little doubt that the largest tropical peatland complex in the world is indeed unimaginably vast.
Threats to peatlands
Yet while I was wading through the mud, the future of these very forests was on the table in Kinshasa and Brazzaville, the respective capitals of the DRC and the Republic of Congo. In early February, the DRC’s environment minister, Amy Ambatobe,
At the moment, about 29,000 square kilometers (11,200 square miles) of the total peatland area officially sits within a logging concession, although actual logging activities in these swamp forests have so far been limited due to their inaccessibility and associated high costs. However, there is
It is unclear how the roads themselves will impact the critical hydrological balance on which the peat swamps’ very existence depends. But
As a case in point, another report, aptly titled “
Forest guardians
This “coming storm” doesn’t have to be. The presence of peatlands with vast quantities of carbon could attract international climate change funding for the Congo rainforest. While there is a lot of discussion on the effectiveness and risks of individual measures, it is clear that
However, these efforts will only succeed with a participatory approach that fully includes local communities and indigenous peoples. Recent research by the Rights and Resources Initiative
Fortunately, when I returned from the forest, I was greeted by some good news as well. Ambatobe, the same DRC minister who had illegally granted logging concessions just a few weeks before, had just signed a historic agreement with his counterparts from the Republic of Congo and Indonesia. In
However, the government of the DRC has not yet moved to cancel the illegally awarded logging concessions. The Brazzaville agreement also does not explicitly mention the land rights of local communities that live in these areas — communities like those in Lokolama, who know the swamp forests best. Without them, I would never have been able to study the deep peatlands that can be found in the DRC. And without a government that fully respects their rights, these forest guardians will not be able to continue to protect the peatlands they so depend on.
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Related to SDG 15: Life on land, SDG 13: Climate action and SDG 10: Reduced inequalities