Congo, Democratic Republic of the
Select a country
DataViz - Custom code
Overview
Background

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), is located in central sub-Saharan Africa, within the Congo Basin. The DRC’s territory straddles the Equator, with one-third of its land area to the north and two-thirds to the south. It is the second largest country in Africa, with a total land area of 2,345,408 km2. The DRC shares borders with the Republic of Congo to the northwest, the Central African Republic to the north, South Sudan to the northeast, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and Tanzania (Lake Tanganyika) to the east, Zambia to the southeast and Angola to the west. The DRC has a largely equatorial climate; however, this varies across the country’s extensive land area. Generally, the country is hot and humid in the north and west, an area located within a significant portion of the Congo River Basin. The southern, central and eastern areas are generally cooler and drier. The DRC is home to an exceptionally high degree of diversity biomes, ecosystems, and habitats, notably dry rainforests (Muhulu), open woodland forests (Miombo), savannahs, as well as cloud and gallery forests. A large network of protected areas, safeguarding this diversity, covers approximately 8% of the national territory. The majority of the land area of the DRC is within the world’s second largest area of tropical rainforest, which is documented to store 8% of global forest carbon stocks. It is also characterized by mountain terraces, plateaus, savannahs, grasslands and mountains. The DRC has over 80 million hectares of arable land and over 1,100 listed minerals and precious metals. The country has a significant natural resource base of timber, energy, minerals and gemstones.

The DRC submitted its Nationally-Determined Contribution to the UNFCCC in 2016, which outlines the country’s environmental goals and its sustainable development agenda. It published its Third National Communication to the UNFCCC in 2015. With respect to anticipated climate change impacts, the DRC’s primary adaptation efforts are focused on the country’s most vulnerable sectors: water resources, agriculture, land use and forestry, sanitation, health, and energy.

Credits: World Bank

Read More
Background

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), is located in central sub-Saharan Africa, within the Congo Basin. The DRC’s territory straddles the Equator, with one-third of its land area to the north and two-thirds to the south. It is the second largest country in Africa, with a total land area of 2,345,408 km2. The DRC shares borders with the Republic of Congo to the northwest, the Central African Republic to the north, South Sudan to the northeast, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and Tanzania (Lake Tanganyika) to the east, Zambia to the southeast and Angola to the west. The DRC has a largely equatorial climate; however, this varies across the country’s extensive land area. Generally, the country is hot and humid in the north and west, an area located within a significant portion of the Congo River Basin. The southern, central and eastern areas are generally cooler and drier. The DRC is home to an exceptionally high degree of diversity biomes, ecosystems, and habitats, notably dry rainforests (Muhulu), open woodland forests (Miombo), savannahs, as well as cloud and gallery forests. A large network of protected areas, safeguarding this diversity, covers approximately 8% of the national territory. The majority of the land area of the DRC is within the world’s second largest area of tropical rainforest, which is documented to store 8% of global forest carbon stocks. It is also characterized by mountain terraces, plateaus, savannahs, grasslands and mountains. The DRC has over 80 million hectares of arable land and over 1,100 listed minerals and precious metals. The country has a significant natural resource base of timber, energy, minerals and gemstones.

The DRC submitted its Nationally-Determined Contribution to the UNFCCC in 2016, which outlines the country’s environmental goals and its sustainable development agenda. It published its Third National Communication to the UNFCCC in 2015. With respect to anticipated climate change impacts, the DRC’s primary adaptation efforts are focused on the country’s most vulnerable sectors: water resources, agriculture, land use and forestry, sanitation, health, and energy.

Credits: World Bank

Read Less
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country
DataViz - Iframe
Select a country

External link to the:

Restor connects people and projects to data, funding, and each other to accelerate learning and action.

Restor is a platform designed to showcase efforts and support communities engaged in protecting and restoring nature. Whether one is a gardener, farmer, involved in a restoration project, or managing global investments, Restor provides an avenue to contribute to the regenerative use of the land we depend on.

Gain site level insights by uploading or drawing your site, granting access to over 35 data insights on biodiversity, carbon, water, and land use.

Map your nature impact and engage with the global restoration network of over 140,000 conservation and restoration sites.

 


 

 

Global Database on Sustainable Land Management (SLM)

The Global SLM Database contains over 1500 SLM practices from all over the world.

The objective of documenting and assessing SLM practices is to share and spread valuable knowledge in land management, support evidence-based decision-making, and scale up identified good practices, thereby contributing to preventing and reducing land degradation and to restoring degraded land.

 

Summary Chart

Current State

DataViz - Custom code
DataViz - Custom code

Stressors

DataViz - Custom code
DataViz - Custom code

Impacts

DataViz - Custom code
DataViz - Custom code

Solutions

DataViz - Custom code
DataViz - Custom code
Commitments

31738400

hectares
LDN
Land Degradation Neutrality

0

hectares
NBSAP
National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans under the Convention on Biological Diversity

3000000

hectares
NDC
Nationally Determined Contributions embody efforts by each country to reduce national emissions and adapt to the impacts of climate change.

8000000

hectares
Bonn Challenge
Bring 150 million hectares of degraded and deforested landscapes into restoration by 2020 and 350 million hectares by 2030
Treaties
DataViz - Custom code