Between 2000 and 2020, Cameroon’s forests saw a dramatic fall in carbon sequestration rates, dropping from 1.13 to 0.56 tC/ha/year. This area reflects that broader trend—a carbon sink in decline due to increasing forest stress, illegal logging, land degradation, and climate extremes. If this pattern continues, Cameroon’s forests risk becoming net carbon emitters, accelerating global warming. This site has been marked not only as a warning, but also as a call to action. The POME-Biogas-Fertilizer model nearby offers a solution: turning waste into bioenergy, enriching soils, and reducing emissions. We must protect forest health and biodiversity here, before nature’s balance tips beyond repair.