Gabon flagEnvironment & Sustainability Guide · Gabon

Environment & Sustainability Guide in Gabon

Air quality, green spaces, and environmental policies

Gabon stands out globally for its vast rainforest coverage exceeding 85% of its land area, making it a critical carbon sink and biodiversity hotspot. As a coastal nation, it experiences climate impacts like temperature increases of approximately 1°C over the past 30 years and rising sea levels threatening mangroves. Protected areas cover over 20% of territory, but data gaps exist in air quality, recycling, and renewable energy metrics. Government policies emphasize forest conservation and Paris Agreement commitments, positioning Gabon as a leader in nature-based solutions.

Air Quality Index

0510
Good
7.5/10
Stable trend

Air quality data for Gabon is limited, with current average AQI and PM2.5/PM10 listed as N/A in databases, showing a stable 6-month trend. Low population density and vast forests contribute to generally good air quality, though urban areas like Libreville may face minor pollution from traffic and biomass burning. No major government air quality initiatives are documented, but forest preservation indirectly supports clean air.

Water Quality

0510
Good
7.0/10

Gabon's water resources benefit from abundant rainfall and rivers, but access to safe drinking water is around 70-80% in urban areas, lower in rural regions. Pollution from oil activities and untreated sewage affects coastal and river waters. Government monitors through the Ministry of Water and Forests, with treatment standards improving via World Bank projects.

Urban piped water is generally safe after treatment; rural reliance on surface water poses contamination risks from bacteria and sediments.

Recycling System

Recycling infrastructure in Gabon is underdeveloped, with average rate N/A and no specific types tracked in databases. Waste management focuses on landfills in Libreville, with limited formal recycling programs. Informal collection exists for plastics and metals, supported by emerging private initiatives.

Green Spaces

Gabon has exceptional forest coverage at 85% of land area, one of the highest globally, with 13 national parks covering 22% of territory including Lopé and Ivindo. These areas protect biodiversity and act as carbon sinks, managed under the Gabon National Parks agency.

Forest Coverage: 85.0%
National Parks: 13
Protected areas total over 26,000 km², safeguarding rainforests and coastal ecosystems from logging and mining.

Environmental Policies

Gabon ratified the Paris Agreement and aims for zero deforestation by 2025 via the 'Emerging Gabon' plan. Key policies include the 2001 Forest Code mandating 20% protected areas and oil revenue-funded conservation. Plastic bag bans implemented in 2019.

Key Policies:
  • Paris Agreement Ratification
  • Zero Deforestation 2025
  • National Forest Action Plan
Renewable Energy: Targets 80% hydropower by 2025; current mix dominated by hydro at ~30%.

Natural Disaster Risk

MODERATE

Gabon faces moderate risks from floods, coastal erosion, and rare earthquakes. No major hurricanes due to equatorial location.

floodscoastal erosionlandslides
Climate Change Impacts: Temperatures have risen ~1.0°C since 1991 per CRU data, with projections of +2°C by 2050. Extreme precipitation events increased 15-20% in frequency over 20 years, exacerbating floods (e.g., 2022 Libreville floods displaced 5,000). Sea levels rose 3-5 mm/year, threatening 10% of coastal mangroves. Droughts less common but intensifying in south.

Sustainability Initiatives

Renewable Energy

Grand Poubara Hydropower Project (120 MW) boosts renewable share; targets 80% hydro by 2025 under national energy plan.

Forest Conservation

National Parks Network protects 22% land; carbon credit deals with international partners fund anti-deforestation.

Protected Areas Expansion

13 parks established 2002-2007 cover 26,000 km², with ecotourism revenue supporting management.

Wildlife & Nature

Western Lowland GorillaCritically Endangered
Forest ElephantCritically Endangered
LeopardVulnerable