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I.Coast to invest 1 billion euros to replenish forest cover
by Staff Writers
Abidjan (AFP) July 2, 2018

The world's top cocoa producer Ivory Coast said Monday it would invest nearly one billion euros over 10 years to replace forests that were razed to grow the bean.

The West African country supplies two million tonnes of cocoa to the world market annually and the commodity is a mainstay of the economy.

Mighty Earth, an NGO, had alleged in an October report that "many of the country's national parks and conservation lands have been cleared of their forest to make way for cocoa operations to feed demand from large chocolate companies like Nestle, Cadbury, and Mars."

Ivorian Minister for Water and Forests Alain-Richard Donwahi told foreign donors on Monday that the government would spend 616 billion CFA francs (940 million euros, $1.09 million) in afforestation programmes.

"Between now and 2030 we will recover 20 percent of our (lost) forest cover. That is our commitment," he said.

Donwahi said the project would involve both public and private partnerships, saying policy would be changed to ensure "that cocoa production does not destroy forests but actually helps preserve them."

"We will identify illegal cocoa plantations tucked away in forests and destroy them," he said, adding that 500,000 tonnes of cocoa were produced in such zones.

ck/ach/boc

NESTLE


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WOOD PILE
Illegal logging threatens DR Congo forest, say investigators
Kinshasa (AFP) June 26, 2018
Illegal logging in the Democratic Republic of Congo is threatening one of the world's biggest forests, the investigative group Global Witness said Tuesday. Global Witness said it had investigated the activities of Lichtenstein-based company Norsudtimber in the DRC, a former Belgian colony, for two years. "Norsudtimber operates almost entirely illegally, in violation of the essential points of the Congolese Forest Code," the NGO claimed, adding that it used satellite images to trace activity in t ... read more

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