An
area of forest the size of the UK is being lost every year around the
world, the vast majority of it tropical rainforest, with dire effects
on the climate emergency and wildlife. The rate of loss has reached
26m hectares (64m acres) a year, a report has found, having grown
rapidly in the past five years despite pledges made by governments in
2014 to reverse deforestation and restore trees. The data is up to
2018 in most cases, so the figures do not include the impact of the
most recent burnings.
The report’s authors note that in June, deforestation rates in the
Brazilian Amazon rose by 88% compared with the same month last year.
The
New York declaration on forests was signed
at the UN in 2014, requiring countries to halve deforestation by
2020 and restore 150m hectares of deforested or degraded forest land.
But
the rate of tree cover loss has gone up by 43% since the declaration
was adopted, while the most valuable and irreplaceable
tropical primary forests
have been cut down at a rate of 4.3m hectares a year. The
goal of the declaration, to halt
deforestation by 2030
– potentially
saving as much carbon as taking all the world’s cars off the roads
– now looks further away than when the commitment was made. Keeping
existing forests standing, particularly in tropical regions, and
restoring wooded areas that have been damaged, has long been
recognised as one of the cheapest ways of tackling the climate
crisis. The cost of preserving key forests globally has been
estimated to be in the tens
of billions of dollars a year, compared with the trillions needed
to shift
to low-carbon infrastructure.
In
Latin America, south-east Asia, and Africa – the major tropical
forest regions – the annual rate of tree cover loss increased
markedly between 2014 and 2018, compared with 2001 to 2013. While the
greatest losses by volume were in tropical Latin America, the
greatest rate of increase was in Africa, where deforestation rates
doubled from less than 2m hectares a year to more than 4m.
Whereas
in previous decades when the humid nature of the rainforest made it
hard to burn, with the lush vegetation acting as an effective
firebreak, global heating in recent years has dried out parts of the
forest and made it easier to combust.
“The
fires are coming at the beginning of the dry season, which is when
you would have expected the forests to be at their wettest and
hardest to burn,” Charlotte
Streck, a co-founder and the director of Climate Focus,said.
“This shows we could be entering into a feedback loop.” Feedback
loops are feared
by climate scientists
because
they amplify the effects of heating. In the case of forests, climate
change dries out trees, making them more flammable, and increasing
temperatures so they burn more easily, which then contributes more
carbon dioxide, which fuels heating. “It can take centuries for
forests to recover their full carbon-absorbing and weather-regulating
capabilities,” Streck said.
Jo
House, a reader in environmental science and policy at the University
of Bristol, said: “Deforestation, mostly for agriculture,
contributes around a third of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. At the
same time, forests naturally take up around a third of anthropogenic
CO2 emissions.
“This
natural sink provided by forests is at risk from the duel compounding
threats of further deforestation and future climate change. The
continued loss of primary forests, at ever-increasing rates, despite
their incalculable value and irreplaceability, is both shocking and
tragic.”
While
there are clear economic benefits to cutting down forests, in the
form of timber production and expanded agriculture, there are few
investments being made in keeping existing forests healthy. Another
complicating factor is that many governments offer
subsidies to agriculture,
which provide perverse incentives for deforestation. Streck said the
failure to meet the pledges made five years ago undercut the value of
such promises if they were not backed up with finance, detailed plans
and on-the-ground implementation.
“We
don’t need more important guys standing up making pledges,” she
said. “We need to go beyond declarations. Implementation is
complicated, but it’s what we need.”
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