Two-thirds of the area's intact forest is found in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), but it also covers big areas of Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, the Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic. The Congo covers 500 million acres of land and is one of the most important wilderness areas left on earth. In spite of all this natural prosperity, the African forests are under risk: titles for these regions across central Africa now cover some 50 million hectares, and attempts to preserve what remains are being troubled by an absence of political staff, money and will, as well as extensive corruption. More than 20 million hectares of logging labels are in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where global logging corporations are causing environmental havoc and social chaos. In the interim the rainforest is being vended off under the impression that the DRC's timber industry will kick start the republic's economy, lifting its people out of poverty and encouraging …show more content…
The Slash-and-burn method is usually used to clear the Congo rain-forests as it is efficient and fast. However, it creates extensive amounts of carbon dioxide, which causes global warming. The profit that can be made by spreading their farmland is a very strong motivation for villages and farmers, which they do by clearing rainforest areas. In the future, the major threats to the Congo rainforest come from industrialized logging and conversion for extensive farming. Some conservationists fear that the Congo could be on the border of a enormous surge in deforestation for rubber, sugar production, and palm