Friday, April 17, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
NewsTrendsKE
  • Business
    • Deals
  • OpEds
  • Sustainability
  • Women in Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Featured
  • Technology
    • Phones
  • Sports
  • World
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
NewsTrendsKE
No Result
View All Result

Home » APO News » World Bank Report: South Sudan Renewable Natural Resources Potential Can Promote Inclusive Economic Growth

World Bank Report: South Sudan Renewable Natural Resources Potential Can Promote Inclusive Economic Growth

Editor by Editor
28 January 2025
in APO News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsApp

The World Bank Group
Download logo

A new South Sudan Natural Resource Review (NRR) report released today by the World Bank reveals that South Sudan has abundant natural resources potential that can be sustainably exploited to promote inclusive economic development. The NRR report is the first to jointly assess three key renewable resources sectors in South Sudan-fisheries, forestry, and wildlife-since independence in 2011, and provides a comprehensive summary of the status, potentials, challenges, and investment needs in each of the sectors. The report highlights that South Sudan’s natural habitats are vast, offering its sparse population a wealth of natural resources. But while approximately 75 percent of South Sudanese already rely directly on local ecosystems for essentials like food, clean water, and energy, these sectors have a far greater potential to contribute towards national development.

Also Read

KCB FC Back in Action, Target Victory Against Ulinzi Stars

17 April 2026
FIFA World Cup 2026

SuperSport Brings All 104 FIFA World Cup 2026™ Matches Live

17 April 2026
Load More

The report notes that fishing is key to the livelihoods of many and makes a huge contribution to overall nutrition and generates significant local government income. Roughly 2.1 million people are estimated to be members of households where at least one person is fishing, with around a quarter of a million active fishers, some 10 percent of whom are full time. The report outlined that the states with the most productive fisheries are Upper Nile, Jonglei, and Unity and the proportion of the population engaged in the sector reaches 30 percent or more.

The current fish catch according to the report is estimated at 300,000 tons per year and is likely significantly lower than average sustainable production, and much of its potential value of around $300 million at local market prices, roughly 70 percent is lost due to poor handling, postharvest physical and quality loss, and the inability to transport to regional markets dominated by foreign exporters, particularly to the Democratic Republic of Congo, where prices roughly double those in South Sudanese markets.

“South Sudan has one of the most productive freshwater fisheries in the world, driven by the highly variable annual flood dynamics of the vast Sudd and surrounding White Nile floodplain. To the southeast of the Sudd, those floodplains support the world’s largest wildlife migration, estimated at over 5 million antelope. But alongside abundance, there have also been rapid declines. Large wildlife has declined around 90 percent across the country, following the proliferation of automatic weapons since the 1980s and high prices of ivory and rhino horn, and the largest teak plantations in Africa have almost vanished,” said Stephen Ling, Lead Environment Specialist, World Bank. “And even though the floodplain fisheries are relatively robust to exploitation, much of the potential value is lost,” added Ling.

In the forestry sector, the report highlights that South Sudan has extensive forest cover of around 30 percent of the national land area, and they have exceptionally high ecosystem integrity and may still contain commercially valuable native species which neighboring countries have largely lost.

In the wildlife sector, the report underlines that South Sudan retains vast and varied natural habitats with the potential to support world-class, nature-based tourism attractions but the two most globally important wildlife landscapes – the vast Sudd wetland and the world’s largest wildlife migration in the Boma-Bandingilo-Jonglei landscape are only partly protected, and wildlife management is very limited throughout the country.

“South Sudan’s remarkable natural assets have the potential to deliver major development benefits for its people. Managing these resources must be done wisely to maximize the benefits and ensure sustainability of these assets into the future. Community-based natural resources management and development of sustainable value chains offer important pathways to diversify away from dependence on oil while directly benefiting rural communities and supporting inclusive development in South Sudan,” said Charles Undeland, World Bank Group Country Manager for South Sudan.

The report outlines the following potential benefits from investments in renewable resources sectors:

  • Modest improvements in the management of the fisheries sector and reducing postharvest losses could potentially generate tens of millions of dollars per year in added value for South Sudan.
  • Restoration of the teak plantation industry could generate close to $1 million per year and 150 jobs per 1,000 hectares on average. Close to a third of South Sudan has the potential for community forest management, which could potentially generate over $1 billion per year in sustainable revenue from nontimber forest products.
  • Wildlife restoration and management could benefit South Sudan by tens or hundreds of millions of dollars. In the Boma-Badingilo-Jonglei landscape (BBJL) alone, well-managed harvesting of migratory antelope populations could provide for a sustainable annual offtake valued at around $61 million. Longer-term potential for nature-based tourism is vast, though there is a large agenda to enable this to occur.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of The World Bank Group.

Previous Post

Congo’s Strategy to Advance Local Content Hydrocarbon Sector

Next Post

Epic views, stable shots: Canon reveals the RF 16-28mm F2.8 IS STM; a fast ultra-wide zoom that packs a creative punch

Related Posts

Sports

KCB FC Back in Action, Target Victory Against Ulinzi Stars

17 April 2026
FIFA World Cup 2026
Sports

SuperSport Brings All 104 FIFA World Cup 2026™ Matches Live

17 April 2026
MultiChoice Talent Factory graduates 19 East African filmmakers
Featured

MultiChoice Talent Factory graduates 19 East African filmmakers

17 April 2026
Churchill Winstone Ochieng
National

SIC Investment’s Fall From Trust: How Churchill Ochieng’s Reign Allegedly Turned an Institution Into a Personal Cash Machine

17 April 2026
Cereal Millers Association (CMA)

Why Safe Flour in Kenya Costs Double And Nobody Wants to Pay – Cereal Millers Association

16 April 2026
FIFA World Cup 2026

SuperSport Brings All 104 FIFA World Cup 2026™ Matches Live

17 April 2026
MultiChoice Talent Factory graduates 19 East African filmmakers

MultiChoice Talent Factory graduates 19 East African filmmakers

17 April 2026
Galaxy S26 night photography

Samsung Galaxy S26 Nightography and the Visual Language of the After-Hours City

16 April 2026

Over a million banking accounts compromised as financial threats move to credential theft

13 April 2026
I&M Foundation Clarifies Position on Ngong Road Forest Project Amid Public Speculation

I&M Foundation Strengthens Conservation Efforts with Additional Support to Ngong Sanctuary Forest

2 April 2026
NewsTrendsKE

NewsTrendsKE

A News Blog For Readers Who Want More

Follow us on social media:

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact

©2026 NewsTrendsKE.

No Result
View All Result
  • Business
    • Deals
  • OpEds
  • Sustainability
  • Women in Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Featured
  • Technology
    • Phones
  • Sports
  • World
  • Contact Us

©2026 NewsTrendsKE.

Go to mobile version