The Guardian (USA)

Forest the size of France regrown worldwide over 20 years, study finds

- Oliver Milman in New York

An area of forest the size of France has regrown around the world over the past 20 years, showing that regenerati­on in some places is paying off, a new analysis has found.

Nearly 59m hectares of forests have regrown since 2000, the research found, providing the potential to soak up and store 5.9 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide – more than the annual emissions of the entire US.

The two-year study, conducted via satellite imaging data and on-ground surveys across dozens of countries, identified areas of regrowth in the Atlantic forest in Brazil, where an area the size of the Netherland­s has rebounded since 2000 due to conservati­on efforts and altered industry practices.

Another regrowth area is found in the boreal forests of Mongolia, where 1.2m hectares of forest have regenerate­d in two decades due to the work of conservati­onists and the Mongolian government. Forests also made a comeback in parts of central Africa and Canada.

However, the world is still experienci­ng an overall loss of forests “at a terrifying rate”, the researcher­s warned, with deforestat­ion occurring much faster than restoratio­n schemes.

Over a similar period outlined in the regrowth study, which was led by WWF as part of the Trillion Trees project, 386m hectares of tree cover were lost worldwide, around seven times the area of regenerate­d forest.

Previous studies have estimated that an area of forest as large as the UK is being lost each year, largely for timber or to make way for agricultur­e, such deforestat­ion posing huge threats to wildlife and efforts to contain the climate crisis.

Deforestat­ion spiked sharply last year, with losses concentrat­ed in the

vital rainforest­s in tropical areas.

Trees are being felled and burned at a rapid rate in the Amazon, with more than 430,000 acres already lost in 2021. Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s president, has come under increasing internatio­nal pressure over such deforestat­ion.

“The science is clear – if we are to avoid dangerous climate change and turn around the loss of nature, we must both halt deforestat­ion and restore natural forests,” said William Baldwin-Cantello, director of nature-based solutions at WWF.

“We’ve known for a long time that natural forest regenerati­on is often cheaper, richer in carbon and better for biodiversi­ty than actively planted forests, and this research tells us where and why regenerati­on is happening, and how we can recreate those conditions elsewhere.

“But we can’t take this regenerati­on for granted – deforestat­ion still claims millions of hectares every year, vastly more than is regenerate­d.”

 ?? Photograph: Staff/Reuters ?? The world is still experienci­ng an overall loss of forests ‘at a terrifying rate’, the researcher­s warned.
Photograph: Staff/Reuters The world is still experienci­ng an overall loss of forests ‘at a terrifying rate’, the researcher­s warned.

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