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Page 1: Makala Project

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Makala ProjectBrief presentation to Charcoal Project, Arusha, June

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p j , ,2011, Jolien Schure & Patrice Levang Makala means charcoal in Lingala/ Swahili language

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Makala ProjectA • “Sustainable management of fuelwood in the Democratic Republic

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of Congo”

• February 2009 - January 2013

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• Total budget: 3 M€ of which 80% EU funding.

• Project partners: French International Agricultural Research Centre for

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(FHS), University of Kisangani (UNIKIS), University of Gembloux,

(FUSAGx) Ministry of Environment Conservation of Nature and TourismP (FUSAGx), Ministry of Environment Conservation of Nature and Tourism

(MECNT: DRH&DDD)

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RCACameroun

Zone forestièreC KisanganiCongo

Gabon

Plateaux batéké RDCBrazzaville

Kinshasa

Bas Congo

THINKING beyond the canopyTHINKING beyond the canopy

Angola

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Work packages

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Module 2environnement socio économique

organisation communautés et filièreA

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inat

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Module 3 ressource bois

Module 4 ressource bois A

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or énergieforêts naturelles

énergie forêts plantées

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Module 5 technologies de transformation

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Module 6 renforcement

Module 7 prospective

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renforcement capacités, formation,..

prospectivedurabilité long terme

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CIRAD CIFOR FHS FUSAGX UNIKISA

1 – management X2 – institutionnel/filières X3 forêts naturelles X XA

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3 – forêts naturelles X X4 – plantations X5 – transformation X6 – formations, transfert XET

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7 – prospective… X

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Securing the fuelwood market chain

• The legal and socio economic framework are A g

analyzed and recommendations have been

formulated and shared with stakeholders.

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• The state of the available resources and practices

in the fuelwood sector have been describedET M

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in the fuelwood sector have been described.

•Organizations in the sector and local groups are PRO

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trained in more sustainable practices.

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Tangible results on the ground

•The plans for sustainable management of natural

f t b ill iti d l d dA forests by village communities are developed and

implemented in 6 sites.

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•Sustainable production of wood-derived energy

from community plantations is promoted in 6 areas ET M

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of Kinshasa’s supply basins

•Production and utilization of charcoal are morePRO

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•Production and utilization of charcoal are more

efficient through the dissemination of technologies

of carbonization and domestic use.

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Knowledge and knowledge building reinforced

•Scientific and technical capacity of actors in the production-to-consumption

A chain are reinforced

• Dissemination and teaching at technical and university level contributes toAK

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• Dissemination and teaching at technical and university level contributes to

the capacity building of the sector

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Contact/ more information

• Website: http://makala.cirad.fr/A p

• CIRAD: Jean-Noel Marien ([email protected])

• CIFOR: Jolien Schure ([email protected]) / Patrice Levang AK

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([email protected])

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THINKING beyond the canopy

Photo credits: Emmanuel Mvula