The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Earth’s intact forests vanishing at accelerati­ng pace — scientists

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PARIS: Earth’s intact forests shrank by an area larger than Austria every year from 2014 to 2016 at a 20 per cent faster rate than during the previous decade, scientists said Wednesday as the UN unveiled an initiative to harness the “untapped potential” of the land sector to fight climate change.

Despite a decades-long effort to halt deforestat­ion, nearly 10 percent of undisturbe­d forests have been fragmented, degraded or simply chopped down since 2000, according to the analysis of satellite imagery.

Average daily loss over the first 17 years of this century was more than 200 square kilometres.

“Degradatio­n of intact forest represents a global tragedy, as we are systematic­ally destroying a crucial foundation of climate stability,” said Frances Seymour, a senior distinguis­hed fellow at the World Resources Institute (WRI), and a contributo­r to the research, presented this week at a conference in Oxford.

“Forests are the only safe, natural, proven and affordable infrastruc­ture we have for capturing and storing carbon.”

The findings come as the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) and five major conservati­on organisati­ons launched a five-year plan, Nature4Cli­mate, to better leverage land use in reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that drive global warming.

“Thirty-seven percent of what is needed to stay below two degrees Celsius” – the cornerston­e goal of the 196-nation Paris Agreement – “can be provided by land,” said Andrew Steer, WRI President and CEO.

“But only three percent of the public funding for mitigation goes to land and forest issues – that needs to change,” he told AFP.

Beyond climate, the last forest frontiers play a critical role in maintainin­g biodiversi­ty, weather stability, clean air, and water quality.

Some 500 million people worldwide depend directly on forests for their livelihood.

So-called “intact forest landscapes” – which can include wetlands and natural grass pastures – are defined as areas of at least 500 sq km with no visible evidence in satellite images of large-scale human use.

That means no roads, industrial agricultur­e, mines, railways, canals or transmissi­on lines.

As of January 2017, there were about 11.6 million sq km of forests worldwide that still fit these criteria. From 2014 to 2016, that area declined by more than 87,000 km2 each year.

“Many countries may lose all their forest wildlands in the next 15 to 20 years,” Peter Potapov, an associate professor at the University of Maryland and lead scientist for the research, told AFP.

On current trends, intact forests will disappear by 2030 in Paraguay, Laos and Equatorial Guinea, and by 2040 in the Central African Republic, Nicaragua, Myanmar, Cambodia and Angola.

“There could come a point in the future where no areas in the world qualify as ‘intact’ anymore,” said Tom Evans, director for forest conservati­on and climate mitigation at the Wildlife Conservati­on Society. “It is certainly worrying.” In tropical countries, the main causes of virgin forest loss are conversion to agricultur­e and logging. In Canada and the United States, fire is the main culprit, while in Russia and Australia, the destructio­n has been driven by fires, mining and energy extraction.

Compared to annual declines during the period 2000-2013, Russia lost, on average, 90 per cent more each year from 2014 to 2016.

For Indonesia, the increase was 62 per cent, and for Brazil it was 16 per cent. — AFP

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