Congo to allow oil drilling in two Unesco listed national parks

Virunga and Salonga are Unesco heritage sites known for gorilla, chimp, elephant populations

A file image of a mountain gorilla holding her baby in the Virunga National Park  in eastern Congo. The Congolese government says it is to open the Virunga and Salonga National Parks to oil drilling. Photograph: Jerome Delay/AP.
A file image of a mountain gorilla holding her baby in the Virunga National Park in eastern Congo. The Congolese government says it is to open the Virunga and Salonga National Parks to oil drilling. Photograph: Jerome Delay/AP.

Democratic Republic of Congo’s government has decided to open up parts of Virunga and Salonga National Parks, home to mountain gorillas, bonobos and other rare species, to oil drilling.

Earlier proposals to allow oil exploration in the parks met fierce resistance from environmental activists, who say drilling would place wildlife at risk and release huge amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, causing global warming.

The government has defended its right to authorise drilling anywhere in the country and said it is mindful of protecting animals and plants in the two Unesco World Heritage Sites.

The cabinet said in a statement that it had approved the establishment of interministerial commissions charged with preparing plans to declassify sections of the parks, including 1,720sq/km, or 21.5 per cent, of eastern Congo’s Virunga.

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Virunga sits on the forest-cloaked volcanoes of central Africa and is home to over half the global population of mountain gorillas.

British company Soco International performed seismic testing there but let its license lapse in 2015.

Salonga covers 33,350sq/km of the Congo Basin, the world's second-largest rainforest, and contains bonobos, forest elephants, dwarf chimpanzees and Congo peacocks. - Reuters