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Congo – Tourism
– Ecotourism, a sector with considerable, yet untapped, potential

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Congo – Tourism
– Ecotourism, a sector with considerable, yet untapped, potential

LakeTele

The richness of the fauna and flora has led the authorities of Congo, a country with a vast forested area, to establish protected areas. Developing ecotourism is a government ambition so that this sector can truly contribute to the national economy and job creation.

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The Congo boasts five national parks, several reserves, and great ape sanctuaries. These sanctuaries span the country from north to south and east to west and offer prime locations for observing large equatorial wildlife. In Odzala-Kokoua National Park, located in the north, visitors can primarily see forest buffalo and elephants, monkeys—including gorillas and chimpanzees—and numerous antelope species: sitatungas, bushbucks, duikers, and forest antelopes.

In the north of the country, the Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park and the Lake Télé Community Reserve also host a significant population of forest elephants, gorillas, chimpanzees, forest lions, buffalo, panthers, and more than 300 species of birds and many other small mammals.

In the Lésio-Louna/Léfini reserve, lowland gorillas, antelopes, bushpigs, hippos, etc., live in total freedom. In the Kouilou department, the Conkouati Douli National Park, which stretches from the ocean to the Mayombe Mountains, is very rich in flora and fauna, notably forest elephants, chimpanzees and gorillas, and has been on the tentative list of UNESCO World Heritage sites since June 12, 2008.

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All sorts of water birds – fish eagles, herons, kingfishers – can be seen during the ascent of the Congo, Ubangi, Alima, Niari, and Sangha rivers, as well as hippos (near Mossaka) and, more discreetly, crocodiles (near Impfondo). The Congolese government aims to transition to sustainable tourism and, as early as December 2020, signed a $14 million funding agreement with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) through the Congo Conservation Company (CCC). With ambitious plans for the development of ecotourism, considered a strategic area for economic diversification, CCC is already working on biodiversity conservation and ecotourism promotion in the Odzala-Kokoua protected area in the Cuvette Ouest department and the Nouabalé-Ndoki protected area in the Sangha department. CCC's new strategy focuses on developing ecotourism in the Odzala and Nouabalé-Ndoki wildlife parks. The goal is to attract as many tourists as possible to Congo, making it a better tourist destination and a driver of national economic growth.

Regarding the integrated conservation project with the communities in Lake Télé, the aim is to enhance the management of peatland ecosystems and the promotion of ecotourism.

This project, validated by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), will be implemented over a period of five years with a budget of more than six million dollars. 

According to the latest World Bank report, ecotourism could significantly boost job creation, rural development, and service exports. Its development depends in particular on improved regulations and resource allocation for the protection of natural heritage, strengthened regulatory and oversight bodies, and the expansion of transport infrastructure and marketing efforts.

 

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