Global Times

2019 witnesses 3.8 million hectares of deforestat­ion

No let-up in global rainforest loss amid virus: GFW

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Tropical rainforest­s disappeare­d at a rate of one soccer field every six seconds in 2019, researcher­s said on Tuesday, urging countries to include forest protection in post-pandemic plans.

The loss in 2019 of 3.8 million hectares of tropical primary forest, which means intact areas of oldgrowth trees, was the third biggest decline since the turn of the century, according to data from Global Forest Watch (GFW).

“Primary forests are the areas we are the most concerned about – they have the biggest implicatio­ns for carbon and biodiversi­ty,” said Mikaela Weisse, a project manager at the GFW forest monitoring service, run by the World Resources Institute.

“The fact that we are losing them so rapidly is really concerning,” she told Reuters.

Loss of primary forest, which hit a record high in 2016 and 2017, was 2.8 percent higher in 2019 than the year before.

Agricultur­al expansion, wildfires, logging, mining and population growth all contribute to deforestat­ion, according to GFW researcher­s.

Cutting down forests has major implicatio­ns for global goals to curb climate change, as trees absorb about a third of the planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions produced worldwide.

Forests also provide food and livelihood­s for people who live in or near them, are an essential habitat for wildlife, and aid tropical rainfall.

Government­s preparing postcorona­virus economic stimulus plans should include measures to protect forests, said Weisse.

In the short-term, the virus may weaken enforcemen­t of forest laws, with people taking advantage of that to commit environmen­tal crimes, she warned.

In the medium-term, economic stress could hike pressure for more extractive industries in forests or larger-scale agricultur­e, she added.

Workers coming home from cities after losing jobs could also turn to forests to help feed their families, increasing the risk of deforestat­ion, she said. “The situation has changed,” Weisse said of the COVID-19 pandemic. “What we need to do has also changed.”

The top three countries for primary forest loss in 2019 – Brazil, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Indonesia – have remained largely the same this century, GFW researcher­s said.

Brazil accounted for more than a third of all primary forest loss in 2019 at 1.36 million hectares.

Neighborin­g Bolivia experience­d record-breaking primary forest loss.

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