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Logging and illegal timber threaten Cameroon's forests — an empty road in the middle of a jungle

Logging and illegal timber threaten Cameroon's forestsCEFR B1

16 Dec 2025

Adapted from Jean Sovon, Global Voices CC BY 3.0

Photo by Angelo Casto, Unsplash

Level B1 – Intermediate
3 min
164 words

Cameroon’s forests cover nearly 22 million hectares and about 45% of the national territory. They form the second‑largest rainforest ecosystem in the Congo Basin after the Democratic Republic of the Congo and act as important carbon sinks and habitats for wildlife.

Demand for tropical species such as ayous, sapelli, tali and bubinga rose from the early 1990s. The government introduced a legal framework for timber in 1994 with quotas and reforestation obligations, but enforcement has been weak in practice. In one recent assessment many concessions produced large volumes of logs for markets in Asia and Europe.

Exports to Europe dropped sharply between 2010 and 2020, and buyers shifted to Asia. Weak enforcement and organised illegal networks use falsified documents, altered volume reports and porous borders to launder timber. Neighbouring countries are used to disguise shipments.

The result is severe pressure on biodiversity, harm to local communities and large losses in state revenue, and it is unclear how authorities will stop these combined pressures.

Difficult words

  • biodiversityvariety of plant and animal life
  • enforcementmaking people follow rules or laws
  • concessionarea given to a company to use
    concessions
  • quotaofficial limit on how much allowed
    quotas
  • reforestationplanting trees to replace lost forests
  • launderhide illegal origin of goods or money
  • carbon sinknatural place that stores carbon dioxide
    carbon sinks

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