Partner Logistics & Field Access

The Congo Basin contains some of the most ecologically significant and physically inaccessible protected areas on Earth. Poor road infrastructure, vast distances, and chronic insecurity across parts of the region make routine ground transport not just slow and costly, but genuinely dangerous. A journey that would take days overland can be completed in hours by air, and in contexts where armed groups operate along road corridors, aviation is not a convenience but a necessity for safe and effective conservation work.

We support key partners operating in these remote landscapes by investing in the logistical capacity they need to function. In practice, this means funding charter flights that allow rangers, researchers, and veterinary teams to reach protected areas and transport the equipment and resources they need, in places that would otherwise be inaccessible or unsafe to reach by ground. It also means helping partners build the operational infrastructure around that access: airstrips, communication systems, and the local knowledge networks that make sustained presence possible.

The rationale is straightforward. Conservation outcomes depend on people being in the field. Anti-poaching patrols cannot operate without personnel on the ground. Wildlife health interventions require rapid response. Community engagement demands consistent presence. All of this depends on the ability to move, and in much of the Congo Basin, that ability cannot be taken for granted.