RAINFORESTS
Global Rainforest Destruction Surged in 2020,
Study Finds
Deutsche WelleMar. 31, 2021 01:32PM ESTCLIMATE
https://www.ecowatch.com/rainforest-loss-2020-2651295064.html
Global
Rainforest Destruction Surged in 2020, Study Finds
An aerial
picture shows a deforested area close to Sinop, Mato Grosso State, Brazil,
taken on August 7, 2020. Florian Plaucheur / AFP / Getty Images
A new study
published Wednesday found that the destruction of primary forest increased by
12% in 2020, impacting ecosystems that store vast amounts of carbon and shelter
abundant biodiversity.
Brazil saw
the worst losses, three times higher than the next highest country, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, according to the report from Global Forest Watch
(GFW) citing satellite data.
The driving
factor of deforestation has been a combination of a demand for commodities,
increased agriculture, and climate change.
2020 was
meant to be a "landmark year" in the fight against deforestation in
which companies, countries and international organizations had pledged to halve
or completely stop forest loss, said the report.
What Were
the Main Takeaways?
The report,
which included data from the University of Maryland, study cited in the report
registered the destruction of 10.4 million acres (4.2 million hectares) of
primary forest.
The loss of
tree cover ー which
refers to plantations as well as natural forest ー was a total of 30 million acres.
Australia saw a ninefold increase in tree cover loss from late 2019 to early 2020
compared to 2018 primarily driven by extreme weather.
Heat and
drought also stoked huge fires in Siberia and deep into the Amazon, researchers
said.
The
findings did, however, show signs of hope, particularly in southeast Asia.
Indonesia and Malaysia saw downward trends for deforestation after implementing
regulations such as a temporary palm oil license ban — although that is set to
expire in 2021.
Researchers
Voice Concern
These
losses constitute a "climate emergency. They're a biodiversity crisis, a
humanitarian disaster, and a loss of economic opportunity," said Frances
Seymour of the World Resources Institute, which is behind the
The
destruction of tropical forests released vast amounts of CO2 in 2020, a total
of 2.6 million tons. That equals the annual amount of emissions from India's
570 million cars, researchers said.
COVID's
Impact on Deforestation
The study
suggested that COVID-19 restrictions may have had an effect when it came to
illegal harvesting because forests were less protected or the return of large
numbers of people to rural areas.
Researchers,
however, said that little had changed when it comes to the trajectory of forest
destruction. They warned the worst could still be to come if countries slash
protections in an attempt to ramp up economic growth, hampered by the pandemic.
If
deforestation goes unchecked it could lead to a negative feedback loop ー where trees lost leads to more
carbon in the air, which in turn leads to increased climate change impacts
leading to more trees being lost, researchers said.
The
aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic could offer and opportunity to reimagine policies
and economies in a way that protects forest before it is too late, the report
suggests.
Seymour
said the most "ominous signal" from the 2020 data is the instances of
forests themselves falling victim to climate change.
"The
longer we wait to stop forestation, and get other sectors on to net zero
trajectories, the more likely it is that our natural carbon sinks will go up in
smoke," she said.

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