Selon le Ministère des Forêts et de la Faune (2018), le Cameroun compte environ 22 millions d'hectares de forêts, soit près de 46% de la superficie totale du pays. 26 000 hectares (0,1% de la superficie forestière) sont classés comme forêts de plantation.
Surface pays
47.3million ha
Surface forestière
20.2million ha
Forêt de production
15.7million ha
Propriété forestière
100% propriété publique
According to the Ministry of Forests and Wildlife (2025) and FAO assessments (2025), Cameroon covers approximately 47.6 million hectares, of which 19.1 million hectares are forested in 2025, representing nearly 40% of the national territory.
Forest management is overwhelmingly based on natural forests under public ownership (100%), with approximately 12.1 million hectares of production forests. These include around 7.1 million hectares of Forest Management Units (FMUs/UFA), 2.35 million hectares of communal forests, and 2.59 million hectares of community forests.
The structure of the forest estate—divided between Permanent Forest Domain (PFD) and Non-Permanent Forest Domain (NPFD)—combined with varying levels of governance and control, creates significant differences in risk across supply chains.
Forest loss in Cameroon, estimated at around 117,000 hectares per year over the period 2020–2025 (FAO 2025), is mainly concentrated in the southern and eastern forest regions, particularly along agricultural frontiers and in accessible areas. It corresponds to an annual loss rate of about 0.6% of total forest cover, characterised by a diffuse and progressive dynamic driven by anthropogenic pressures, rather than large-scale industrial conversion.
This deforestation is primarily driven by:
In parallel, forest degradation and legality risks are strongly linked to:
In this context, operators sourcing from Cameroon must go beyond country-level indicators and conduct a robust, supply chain–specific due diligence, taking into account forest type, origin of the timber, and local risk dynamics.
|
CORRUPTION PERCEPTION INDEX (Transparency international) 26
/100 0 is highly corrupt, 100 is very clean. |
ILLEGAL DEFORESTATION AND ASSOCIATED TRADE (IDAT) Risk (Forest Trend) 91.75
/100 100 is higher risk, 0 is lower risk
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SOURCING HUB RISK SCORE (Preferred by nature) 0
/100 0 is higher risk, 100 is lower risk
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COUNTRY DEFORESTESTATION CLASSIFICATION LIST - EUDR (European Commission) Standard risk category For more information about the methodology, see here
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Sources :
Interpretation of Risk Indicators
Regional and Structural Risk Considerations
Risk levels may vary significantly within producer countries. However, in Cameroon, risk assessment should not rely solely on geographic location. It must be structured around a combination of spatial, legal, and operational factors.
Cameroon-specific risk approach:
Risk is primarily determined by:
Risk interpretation by forest domain:
Important:
The presence of official documents does not, by itself, guarantee legality. Compliance must be demonstrated through a coherent and verifiable set of information covering the entire supply chain.
Sources:
• FAO, Global Forest Resources Assessment 2025 – Cameroon
• FAO, forest domain structure and land-use classifications (Permanent vs Non-Permanent Forest Domain, pp. 15–27)
• Preferred by Nature, Timber Legality Risk Assessment – Cameroon (2021)
• TRAFFIC & FODER (2025), Guide to verify the legality of timber from Cameroon
| HARVESTING SOURCE | DUE DILIGENCE COMPLEXITY | DUE DILIGENCE CONSIDERATION |
|---|---|---|
| Forest Management Units (FMUs/UFAs) Permanent forest domain (PFD) |
Moderate | Long-term concessions managed under approved forest management plans. Generally provide the highest level of traceability, planning and regulatory oversight. Verify concession rights, management plans, annual operating permits and harvesting records. |
| Council Forests Permanent Forest Domain (PFD) |
Moderate | Managed under approved management plans. Verify legal allocation, harvesting authorisations and implementation of management requirements. |
| Community Forests Non-Permanent Forest Domain (NPFD) |
High | May present additional challenges regarding governance capacity, traceability, implementation of management plans and land-use change risks. Enhanced verification is recommended |
| Vente de Coupe Non-Permanent Forest Domain (NPFD) |
High to Very High | Short-term permits not supported by long-term forest management plans. Due diligence may be more complex due to limited long-term planning, shorter permit duration and greater need to verify harvesting boundaries, legality and traceability. |
| Small-scale permits (ARB, AEB, APC, etc.) Non-Permanent Forest Domain (NPFD) |
High to Very High | Limited-scope permits that often require extensive verification of timber origin, permit justification and chain of custody. Enhanced scrutiny is strongly recommended. |