The Japan Times - Despite gains in Brazil, forest destruction still 'stubbornly' high: report

EUR -
AED 3.804709
AFN 77.173939
ALL 98.583483
AMD 410.170979
ANG 1.869121
AOA 946.266488
ARS 1091.696847
AUD 1.652874
AWG 1.867189
AZN 1.75698
BAM 1.947609
BBD 2.093953
BDT 126.010038
BGN 1.95527
BHD 0.390354
BIF 3069.82991
BMD 1.035888
BND 1.398989
BOB 7.166858
BRL 6.022445
BSD 1.037118
BTN 90.680748
BWP 14.394184
BYN 3.393993
BYR 20303.411698
BZD 2.083198
CAD 1.487002
CDF 2957.461198
CHF 0.937629
CLF 0.026208
CLP 1005.650783
CNY 7.551362
CNH 7.555443
COP 4326.470573
CRC 526.276472
CUC 1.035888
CUP 27.451041
CVE 109.802144
CZK 25.116205
DJF 184.679725
DKK 7.459421
DOP 64.109138
DZD 140.378603
EGP 52.090059
ERN 15.538325
ETB 130.831589
FJD 2.396323
FKP 0.853144
GBP 0.83723
GEL 2.894167
GGP 0.853144
GHS 15.971827
GIP 0.853144
GMD 74.583747
GNF 8966.117981
GTQ 8.0182
GYD 216.977455
HKD 8.065649
HNL 26.570814
HRK 7.644388
HTG 135.656847
HUF 405.712934
IDR 16938.276593
ILS 3.67961
IMP 0.853144
INR 90.726365
IQD 1358.586178
IRR 43610.899592
ISK 146.55742
JEP 0.853144
JMD 163.769651
JOD 0.734858
JPY 157.76164
KES 133.751058
KGS 90.588209
KHR 4161.16358
KMF 489.923611
KPW 932.299632
KRW 1501.748589
KWD 0.319613
KYD 0.864257
KZT 536.1101
LAK 22552.152144
LBP 92872.60801
LKR 309.627795
LRD 206.378049
LSL 19.311296
LTL 3.058709
LVL 0.626598
LYD 5.094476
MAD 10.380642
MDL 19.414162
MGA 4867.639514
MKD 61.484154
MMK 3364.52496
MNT 3519.948731
MOP 8.319311
MRU 41.348303
MUR 48.345228
MVR 15.963466
MWK 1798.319426
MXN 21.359003
MYR 4.594183
MZN 66.203332
NAD 19.311296
NGN 1556.409493
NIO 38.079586
NOK 11.649528
NPR 145.088
NZD 1.829674
OMR 0.398845
PAB 1.037138
PEN 3.849882
PGK 4.148211
PHP 60.192879
PKR 288.960873
PLN 4.202068
PYG 8171.475361
QAR 3.781559
RON 4.97465
RSD 117.058453
RUB 100.560324
RWF 1446.100139
SAR 3.885187
SBD 8.742296
SCR 14.903437
SDG 622.558829
SEK 11.30683
SGD 1.401546
SHP 0.853144
SLE 23.716661
SLL 21722.060714
SOS 592.701546
SRD 36.364899
STD 21440.797435
SVC 9.074747
SYP 13468.620337
SZL 19.300455
THB 34.985578
TJS 11.320091
TMT 3.635968
TND 3.292569
TOP 2.426158
TRY 37.181296
TTD 7.02439
TWD 34.016809
TZS 2635.071065
UAH 43.166438
UGX 3816.94702
USD 1.035888
UYU 45.129762
UZS 13466.548468
VES 61.517319
VND 26176.898654
VUV 122.982745
WST 2.901344
XAF 653.203508
XAG 0.032282
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.79954
XDR 0.795447
XOF 652.095783
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.884301
ZAR 19.252985
ZMK 9324.238051
ZMW 29.064203
ZWL 333.555627
  • NGG

    -0.9200

    61.75

    -1.49%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.44

    -0.81%

  • GSK

    -0.6520

    37.048

    -1.76%

  • BP

    0.2750

    31.945

    +0.86%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.54

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    0.2150

    41.315

    +0.52%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    11.66

    +0.86%

  • RBGPF

    -0.7000

    65.3

    -1.07%

  • RELX

    -0.4000

    50.37

    -0.79%

  • RIO

    1.2850

    62.655

    +2.05%

  • CMSD

    0.1320

    23.952

    +0.55%

  • BCC

    1.5150

    126.265

    +1.2%

  • VOD

    0.1490

    8.419

    +1.77%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.83

    0%

  • AZN

    2.9850

    73.92

    +4.04%

  • BCE

    -1.2150

    23.685

    -5.13%

Despite gains in Brazil, forest destruction still 'stubbornly' high: report
Despite gains in Brazil, forest destruction still 'stubbornly' high: report / Photo: Michael Dantas - AFP

Despite gains in Brazil, forest destruction still 'stubbornly' high: report

The world lost 10 football fields of old-growth tropical forest every minute in 2023 and despite uplifting progress in the Amazon, the picture elsewhere is less rosy, researchers said on Thursday.

Text size:

Tropical forests absorb carbon and are a vital ally in the fight against climate change, but they are also the most ravaged by deforestation.

High rates of tropical forest loss remain "stubbornly consistent" despite nations pledging in recent years to protect these critical environments, said researchers from the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the University of Maryland.

Around 3.7 million hectares of primary tropical forest -- an area nearly the size of Bhutan -- was lost last year, they said.

"Impressive" declines in Brazil and Colombia were "largely counteracted by increases" in tropical forest lost elsewhere, said Mikaela Weisse from WRI, a nonprofit research organisation.

"The world took two steps forward, two steps back when it comes to this past year's forest loss," said Weisse, director of WRI's Global Forest Watch, which uses satellite imagery to aid its analysis.

They focused on tropical forests because of their particular vulnerability to deforestation and capacity to store carbon, and considered various causes of destruction including farming, logging and fires.

- Amazon gains -

The 2023 figures represent a nine percent decline in forest loss compared to 2022 but in general, rates have barely wavered from the highs of recent years, researchers said.

Aside from soaking up huge quantities of carbon, tropical forests protect soil, host the majority of the world's plant and animal species, and filter air and water.

But there was good news from Brazil, which lost 36 percent less primary forest than the year prior -- its lowest level since 2015.

This "dramatic" decline was most pronounced in the Amazon, a rainforest so vast that it stores the equivalent of around 20 years of emissions of carbon dioxide.

Researchers said this coincided with the first year of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who vowed to defend the Amazon and restore forest protections after former leader Jair Bolsonaro revoked environmental safeguards.

There were disparities across the country, however, with a very clear improvement in the Amazon but a deterioration in the Cerrado, the heartland of Brazil's agriculture industry.

In Colombia, where President Gustavo Petro has been trying to negotiate peace with armed groups, there was a roughly 50 percent decline in forest lost in a year.

Forest conservation was an "explicit goal" of these peace talks, Weisse said.

- Off track -

"The 2023 data shows that countries can cut rates of forest loss when they muster the political will to do so. But we also know that progress can be reversed when political winds change," said Rod Taylor, global director of forests at WRI.

By contrast, forest losses hit a record high for a third year running in Bolivia, in part due to the conversion of land for its growing soy industry.

Agriculture also played a major role in sharp increases in forest destruction in Laos -- where land is under pressure due to investments and demand from China -- and Nicaragua, researchers said.

The Democratic Republic of Congo -- home to the enormous Congo Basin, which absorbs more carbon than it releases -- lost more than half a million hectares of primary forest for another year in a row.

Outside the tropics, wildfires caused immense losses of tree cover, particularly in Canada which experienced record-breaking blazes.

Taylor said this was the second year of full annual data on forest loss since more than 140 countries agreed at the COP26 climate summit to halt and reverse deforestation by 2030.

But deforestation was almost 2 million hectares above the level needed to meet this target, said Taylor.

"Are we on track to halt deforestation by 2030? The short answer? No... we are far off track and trending in the wrong direction," he said.

K.Abe--JT