Cacheu’s wetlands are also critical for climate mitigation and resilience. In this landscape, mangroves store an estimated 248 million tonnes of CO₂ and sequester approximately 630.000 of tonnes of CO₂ each year, making them powerful natural carbon sinks. They stabilize coastlines, buffer storm impacts, slow water flow, and reduce erosion, helping both people and nature adapt to rising seas and changing climates.
However, Cacheu faces mounting pressures. Overfishing, mangrove logging, and the expansion of cashew plantations are degrading key habitats and threatening livelihoods. Planned offshore oil and gas exploration, phosphate mining, and infrastructure projects could further destabilize ecosystems if unmanaged. Climate change amplifies these threats, with projected rainfall declines of up to 30% by 2045 likely to increase drought risks, drive saline intrusion, and alter freshwater-dependent habitats.