Skip to main content

CAMERR: Cameroon Mangrove Ecosystem Restoration & Resilience

In November 2022, Sia Partners, together with Orange and Planète Urgence, launched the CAMERR project (Cameroon Mangrove Ecosystem Restoration & Resilience).

Mangroves are disappearing. An estimated 25% of mangroves have been lost in the past 40 years, resulting from coastal development, land conversion for aquaculture and agriculture, overexploitation, and pollution. The societal implications of depleted mangrove ecosystems are vast: they include reduced economic growth, impoverished livelihoods, declining human security, poorer quality of life for local communities. and more carbon in the atmosphere. 

CAMERR Project

In November 2022, Sia Partners, together with Orange and Planète Urgence, launched the CAMERR project (Cameroon Mangrove Ecosystem Restoration & Resilience). CAMERR aims to restore 1,000 hectares of mangrove forests in the Cameroon and Ntem estuaries over a 30-year period, making it the largest-ever mangrove restoration project in Cameroon. The project contributes to global carbon neutrality and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. 

Mangrove forests are extremely valuable ecosystems: they are havens for biodiversity, prevent coastal flooding, filter pollutants, and sequester significant amounts of carbon from the atmosphere. In Cameroon, however, 66% of the mangrove forests are depleted; it is estimated that nearly 3,000 hectares of mangrove forests in the country disappear every year. This has led to destructive flooding, contaminated drinking water, and a significant strain on aquatic life, which is detrimental to the economic and food security of local communities.  

Rapid, widespread action is needed to ensure coastal populations can restore the mangroves and reappropriate these ecosystems in the long term. CAMERR is a tremendous step forward in response to these challenges. In addition to the positive impact on climate change and biodiversity inherent to the project, CAMERR promises to have a significant socio-economic impact, most notably in terms of job creation and training programs for the development of sustainable forestry, fish farming, agriculture, and aquaculture practices.  

Planète Urgence, an international NGO based in Paris, manages the CAMERR project, working alongside local partners, communities, and traditional, local and national authorities, with the support of Sia Partners and Orange. The active involvement of local populations is of utmost importance; CAMERR complies with Cameroonian protocol to ensure full disclosure of the project to local communities for their consent and to maintain an open dialogue. 

The link to the full press release can be found here: Sia Partners, Orange and Planète Urgence launch the largest ever mangrove restoration project in Cameroon.

Benefits of Mangroves

Carbon absorption 

  • Mangroves capture carbon and store it in the muddy soil they live in, preventing its release into the atmosphere. They sequester over three times more carbon per equivalent area than any other ecosystem on Earth, making them a highly valuable ‘nature-based solution’ to climate change.  

Protection of shorelines 

  • Mangroves' interlocking roots and branches reduce wind and inhibit rising water and swell waves, making them highly effective at lessening storm damage. Their dense root systems also prevent erosion, to further protect shorelines from flooding. 

Improved water quality 

  • Mangroves help provide clean water by filtering pollutants, absorbing excess nutrients, and trapping sediments, improving water clarity and quality. 

Socioeconomic impact 

  • Mangroves are vital to local communities and economies, with millions of people relying on these ecosystems for food, wood for cooking and building, and income from fishing and tourism. According to the UNEP, mangroves generate an estimated 33,000-57,000 USD per hectare per year for the national economies of developing countries where they grow. They contribute to international goals for poverty reduction, as well as clean water and sanitation, and gender equality. 

Biodiversity hotspots 

  • Mangroves are havens of biodiversity, providing a home, feeding ground, and nursery for a broad array of species. There are over 40 bird, 10 reptile, 6 mammal, and one amphibian species which are exclusively found in mangroves.
Mangrove Tree

Expected Impact

As the project progresses, we expect that CAMERR will respond to nine of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. 

UN Goals

CAMERR Targets

We have three core objectives for this project: first, to restore the Mangrove ecosystem as much as possible; second, to provide local populations with the necessary tools and knowledge to preserve the mangrove forest; and finally, to strengthen the socio-economic autonomy of these communities.

More information can be found below. 

trees by the river

Mangrove ecosystem partially rehabilitated

  • 1,000 hectares  
  • 88 nurseries 
  • 1,145 people employed 
  • 1 biodiversity study 
man holding branches

Local populations equipped to preserve the mangrove forests

  • 37 workshops 
  • 1,130 people trained, including 200 school children 
little leaf

Socio-economic autonomy of local populations reinforced

  • Support for entrepreneurs 
  • Income-generating initiatives 
  • Sustainable fish farming, agriculture, aquaculture 

Get in touch!

Sia Partners integrates this data in its client database to send you marketing communications (invitations to events, newsletters and new commercial offers).
This data will be kept for 3 years before being deleted and you can withdraw your consent to the processing of your data at any time.
To learn more about the management of your personal data and to exercise your rights, please consult our Data Protection Policy.

CAPTCHA

Your data are used by Sia Partners to process your contact request. Please note that you have rights regarding your personal data. For more information, we invite you to read our data protection policy