The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘Unmapped roads raise risk to Southeast Asian rainforest­s’

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KUALA LUMPUR: Forests in parts of Southeast Asia face greater threats than previously thought because researcher­s often rely on data that ignores new roads, which are precursors to deforestat­ion and developmen­t, a study shows.

The paper, published this month by the journal Biological Conservati­on, showed that an average of 75 percent of roads in five countries were missing from OpenStreet­Map (OSM), a mapping platform widely used by researcher­s and academics.

“Large-scale forest clearance is preceded by the growth of road networks, which provide a stark warning for the region’s future,” the study said.

Author Alice Hughes, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, studied a total of 277,281sq km by analysing satellite images and maps showing forest loss and coverage, as well as agricultur­e concession­s.

She found that roads have penetrated areas previously considered untouched and unreachabl­e by vehicles.

“We are deluding ourselves that we still have large tracts of inaccessib­le, pristine forest, when the reality is highly-fragmented, very accessible forests,” Hughs said yesterday.

Her research examined road networks in parts of Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.

“In some parts of the region, up to 99 percent of roads on those global maps, which are used as the basis for a huge amount of further analysis, are not included,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Deforestat­ion and developmen­t of forests in the area studied have occurred at a rapid pace since 2000, said Hughes, while maps used by researcher­s do not regularly update their road data.

“Most of the time these roads are just providing access to forests and up to 99 per cent of deforestat­ion is within 2.5 km of road,” she said. “They are clearly the access method.”

She added that the region urgently needs better protection and enforcemen­t for its remaining forests.

Indonesia, which is the world’s biggest palm oil producer, introduced a forest clearing moratorium in 2011 to help reduce deforestat­ion.

Hughes said the ban should be expanded beyond just land designated as natural, untouched primary forest to include all high biodiversi­ty forests. — Reuters

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