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Gabon junta permits managed logging of rare kevazingo tree

Gabon's junta has actually unwinded guidelines covering the unusual kevazingo tree, enabling logging under particular conditions of a wood species that can take 500 years to grow to its full height of 40 metres (130 feet).

There is high demand in Asia for kevazingo wood, which is used to make stylish tables and speciality guitars, to name a few things.

Gabon's previous federal government outlawed kevazingo cutting in 2018 due to trafficking. However a loophole allowed sales and exports of fallen trees left on the ground for a minimum of 6 months, or seized from illegal loggers.

Exactly a year after the military took power, the council of ministers on Saturday authorized a decree allowing kevazingo to be visited sustainably handled concessions tracked with a. geo-referencing system.

A mentions license controling worldwide trade in wild. animals and plants will be needed to export finished products.

By promoting regional processing, the decree promotes the. economic development of forest areas and produces brand-new. job opportunity, the ministers said in a statement.

Forestry is a significant industry in Gabon, where there are. around 27 million hectares of forest cover, according to the. United Nations, making it one of the world's most forested. countries.

The last elected president, Ali Bongo, cast himself as an. environmental crusader, banning raw wood exports and expanding. protected zones after he succeeded his father in 2009 -. continuing a family dynasty that exceeded 5 decades.

But Gabon remained a hub for poachers, unlawful logging and. illegal wildlife trade in spite of the efforts.

In 2019, Bongo fired his vice president and his forests. minister after numerous containers of illegally logged. kevazingo wood that had actually been seized went missing.

(source: Reuters)