The Guardian Australia

Global deforestat­ion pledge will be missed without urgent action, say researcher­s

- Damian Carrington Environmen­t editor

The destructio­n of global forests slowed in 2021 but the vital climate goal of ending deforestat­ion by 2030 will still be missed without urgent action, according to an assessment.

The area razed in 2021 fell by 6.3% after progress in some countries, notably Indonesia. But almost 7m hectares were lost and the destructio­n of the most carbon- and biodiversi­tyrich tropical rainforest­s fell by only 3%. The CO2 emissions resulting from the lost trees were equivalent to the emissions of the entire European Union plus Japan.

Global heating could not be limited to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels without ending deforestat­ion, experts said. At the UN’s Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow last year, 145 countries pledged to end the felling of forests by the end of the decade. The demolition and degradatio­n of forests causes about 10% of global carbon emissions.

However, based on current trends, the Glasgow leaders’ declaratio­n would be as “hollow” as the pledge made by countries in 2014 to end deforestat­ion by 2020, the assessment’s authors said.

There was little clarity or transparen­cy of the measures being taken to end deforestat­ion and only 1% of the required funding was being provided, they said, and most importantl­y a lack of political will.

Erin Matson at Climate Focus, a policy group and one of the coalition of organisati­ons that conducted the assessment, said: “The [Glasgow declaratio­n] was a big moment, the first time such a target had been embraced at the leaders level by so many countries, covering 90% of global forests.

“But we are not on track. There has been some modest improvemen­t, but even this could just be temporary. Many countries are putting their progress at risk by phasing out or rolling back protection­s. For example, Indonesia did not renew its palm oil moratorium after it expired in September 2021 and a recently adopted law on job creation poses a serious threat to natural forests.”

The largest area of destroyed forest in 2021 was in Brazil, where deforestat­ion has risen under president Jair Bolsonaro, having fallen under his predecesso­r, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

The election contest between the two men, on 30 October, has been described by scientists as likely to determine the fate of the Amazon. “The stakes are high,” Matson said.

David Gibbs, a research associate at the World Resources Institute’s (WRI) Global Forest Watch, said: “We are quickly moving toward another round of hollow commitment­s and vanished forests.”

Fran Price, at the World Wildlife Fund, said: “There is no pathway to meeting the 1.5C target or reversing biodiversi­ty loss without halting deforestat­ion and conversion. It is time for bold leadership and daring solutions.”

Four of the top five countries with the largest areas of deforestat­ion – Brazil, Bolivia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Paraguay – increased the destructio­n in 2021.

However, “exceptiona­l progress” in some countries showed the 2030 goal was still possible, the authors said. Indonesia, the only country to cut deforestat­ion in each of the past five years, and its neighbour Malaysia, reduced forest destructio­n by about 25% in 2021. As a result, tropical Asia is the only region on track for zero deforestat­ion by 2030.

A drive to end the razing of forests for cocoa plantation­s in Ivory Coast and Ghana helped deforestat­ion fall by 47% and 13% respective­ly, while new national parks and measures to fight illegal logging led to a 28% fall in Gabon. Tropical Latin America, Mexico, Vene

zuela, Colombia and Guatemala also reported cuts in deforestat­ion in 2021.

“We have the data and we know what interventi­ons work – the missing element is the political will to actually undertake those actions,” said Frances Seymour at WRI.

The measures include government bans combined with effective enforcemen­t, collaborat­ions with the beef, soy, timber and other commodity companies whose products are most linked to deforestat­ion, internatio­nal trade measures and the strengthen­ing of the land rights of Indigenous and other local people.

Countries backing the Glasgow declaratio­n pledged to quadruple annual funding to tackle deforestat­ion but no informatio­n was yet available on how these pledges would be met, the authors said.

Only a quarter of the biggest global companies in the agricultur­e sector have announced strong policies to eliminate deforestat­ion from their supply chains and just 20% of these are close to meeting their commitment­s. The new forest declaratio­n assessment used data on permanent tree cover loss around the world to create a baseline from 2018-20. To get to zero deforestat­ion by 2030 requires a fall of 10% a year, meaning the current slowing of deforestat­ion is insufficie­nt.

Forest cover has increased in some countries since 2000 but less than the area lost. New forests could not offset the huge carbon storage and biodiversi­ty of existing natural forests, the authors said.

Protecting intact forests had even more climate benefits than just the CO2 stored, said Seymour, thanks to their role in producing cloud cover that cools the planet. “If we take the non-carbon processes into account, they amplify the cooling effect of ending tropical forest loss by about 50%,” she said.

Michael Wolosin, at Conservati­on Internatio­nal, said: “That 50% cooling bonus should be included by forest countries in their accounting to gain the recognitio­n and finance they deserve for the services their forests are providing to the world.”

 ?? Photograph: Amanda Perobelli/Reuters ?? Aerial view of deforestat­ion in Mato Grosso state, Brazil, in July 2021.
Photograph: Amanda Perobelli/Reuters Aerial view of deforestat­ion in Mato Grosso state, Brazil, in July 2021.

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