Speeches Shim
USAID’s Strengthening Central Africa Environmental Monitoring and Policy Support (SCAEMPS) activity serves as a bridge between biodiversity and forest conservation work, policy issues and local, national and international stakeholders in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the Republic of Congo (ROC).
Virunga, the smallest and easternmost of the nine USAID-supported landscapes lies along the northeast border of the DRC, extending into northwest Rwanda and southwest Uganda.
The second smallest and northernmost of the nine USAID under CARPE supported landscapes; Sangha Tri-National World Heritage Site straddles the borders of the Republic of Congo, Cameroon and the Central African Republic. It encompasses three contiguous national parks1 and adjoins the Lac Télé-Lac Tumba landscape along its eastern edge.
Salonga-Lukenie-Sankuru, located in central Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) south of the Maringa-Lopori-Wamba and east of the Lac Télé-Lac Tumba landscapes, is one of the largest of the nine USAID- supported landscapes. Salonga National Park, is divided into two almost equally sized north and south sections.
The Maringa-Lopori-Wamba landscape, located in north-central Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and just east of the Lac
Télé -Lac Tumba landscape is one of nine USAID-supported landscapes. It is a mix of lowland rainforest and swamp forest bounded by two Congo Basin river watersheds, the Maringa in the south and the Lopori in the north.
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