Yahoo – AFP,
11 June 2014
Geneva (AFP) - Environmental campaigners WWF and oil exploration firm Soco International announced on Wednesday that the British firm had agreed to halt its hunt for oil in part of Africa's oldest national park.
![]() |
A pair of
baby gorillas are seen at Democratic Republic of Congo's Virunga
National Park,
on September 22, 2012 (AFP Photo/Luanne Cadd)
|
Geneva (AFP) - Environmental campaigners WWF and oil exploration firm Soco International announced on Wednesday that the British firm had agreed to halt its hunt for oil in part of Africa's oldest national park.
In a joint
statement, they said the WWF had in turn pledged not to pursue a complaint
against Soco which it had filed with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development.
The two
sides have locked horns over plans to tap oil in the Democratic Republic of
Congo's Virunga park, home to 3,000 species including the endangered gorillas
immortalised by the film "Gorillas in the Mist".
![]() |
A
peacekeeper of the Monusco, the UN
mission in DR Congo, patrolls near an
entrance to Virunga National Park, on
March 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/Alain
Wandimoyi)
|
The
7,800-square-kilometre (3,000-square-mile) Virunga park was created in 1925
when the country was a Belgian colony.
Despite its
own environmental rules and international accords, the government of the conflict-wracked
but resource-rich republic in 2007 awarded oil concessions in much of the park.
The UN
cultural body UNESCO has said oil exploration and exploitation would breach
Virunga's World Heritage site status, and in May last year French giant Total
-- Soco's fellow concession holder -- said it would not drill there.
Soco has
already begun seismic testing in the area, though in a separate statement it
underlined that no drilling commitments had ever been made.
"In
relation to Virunga National Park we will complete our existing operational
programme of work in Virunga which we anticipate will conclude within
approximately 30 days of the date of this statement," Soco said in the
joint statement.
"The
company commits not to undertake or commission any exploratory or other
drilling within Virunga National Park unless UNESCO and the DRC government
agree that such activities are not incompatible with its World Heritage
status," it added.
In
addition, it said that it had committed not to conduct operations in any other
World Heritage site.
In a
separate company statement, Soco chairman Rui de Sousa underlined that the
accord with the WWF also focused on the need for the Congolese government and
UNESCO to "reach an agreement on the best way to combine development and
the environment."
The WWF also issued a statement, in which its director general Marco Lambertini lauded the deal as "a victory for our planet and for good practices in business".
The WWF also issued a statement, in which its director general Marco Lambertini lauded the deal as "a victory for our planet and for good practices in business".
The park
includes part of Lake Edward, a huge expanse of water whose fisheries generate
an estimated $30 million (22 million euros) annually for local communities,
according to the WWF.
The WWF has
also said that the park has huge potential for the sustainable development of
hydropower and ecotourism.
"If
free from the threat of oil, Virunga can be a continuing source of hope for the
people of DRC. As in other African countries, with proper investment, this park
can become a leading economic driver for its communities," said Raymond
Lumbuenamo, head of the WWF's operations in the country.
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