Togo tightens forestry regulations to curb informal practices

Togo is tightening control over its forest management and clarifying a sector long exposed to informal abuses. The ministerial order signed on March 18, 2026, precisely redefines the conditions for accessing essential administrative documents, from logging permits to export licenses, including reforestation certificates. The ambition is to make procedures more transparent, faster, and above all more traceable, in order to reduce the opacity that has weakened forest governance.

This reform acts as a lever for economic discipline. By requiring wood depot operators and sawmills to comply within 45 days, the state introduces binding deadlines that compel a break with irregular practices.

The forestry sector, often characterized by parallel channels, thus enters a normalization phase where legality becomes the condition for market access. This requirement, if rigorously applied, can curb uncontrolled exploitation and limit the gradual erosion of forest cover.

See also/Togo: The government is tightening regulations on the cashew industry to boost local processing

The environmental impact is central. By further regulating the flow of wood products and promoting reforestation certificates, authorities are laying the groundwork for a balance between exploitation and regeneration. Togo’s forests, subject to increasing pressures related to urbanization and energy demand, here find a more structured protection mechanism. Traceability of activities becomes a preservation tool, enabling better monitoring of extractions and encouraging responsible practices.

On the economic front, clarifying the rules offers greater visibility for operators. A simplified administrative framework reduces delays, limits informal costs, and strengthens the sector’s credibility with investors. This legal stability can foster the emergence of a more competitive timber industry, capable of creating value while respecting environmental requirements.

The challenge of implementation remains. The reform will only produce results if monitoring follows and if the administration has the necessary means to enforce the new provisions.

Success will depend on the ability to transform standards into practice. Because beyond the text, a certain idea of ecological sovereignty is asserting itself—that of a country choosing to protect its resources to better guarantee its future.

Chantal TAWELESSI

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