Colombia deforestation forecast to drop
Deforestation in Colombia during 2022 is forecast to have fallen by up to 10 versus the previous year, Environment Minister Susana Muhamad has said, citing significant decreases in the country's Amazon.
The South American country is one of the world's most biodiverse, with swathes of its continental territory covered by Amazon rainforest, which scientists say is vital to curbing catastrophic climate change, because of the vast amounts of greenhouse gases it absorbs.
Deforestation in Colombia in 2021 rose 1.5 per cent versus the previous year to 1,741 square kilometres, representing an area twice the size of New York City.
"We hope to have a total reduction (of deforestation) across the country of between 5 per cent and 10 per cent," Muhamad said during a press conference at the environment ministry.
A 10 per cent decrease in deforestation would take the total area of forest destroyed during 2022 in Colombia to below the 1,589 square kilometres registered in 2019, the first full year of the administration of former President
Ivan Duque.
The projected national decrease is a result of a 15 per cent to 25 per cent fall in deforestation in three provinces which fall within Colombia's Amazon region, Muhamad said, which traditionally accounts for close to two-thirds of forest destruction in the country.
However, in some areas deforestation numbers "have risen significantly," Muhamad said, highlighting the provinces of Putumayo and Choco, as well as the San Lucas mountain range.
Deforestation in 12 of Colombia's national parks in the Amazon during the first quarter of 2023 fell drastically to 398 hectares (3.98 square kilometres), from 9,260 hectares (92.6 square kilometres) in the year-earlier period, Muhamad added.
Between 2001 and 2021, more than 31,000 square kilometres of forest were destroyed in Colombia, of which some 18,600 square kilometres were deforested in the country's Amazon.
Colombia's government will publish full deforestation figures for 2022 in June, Muhamad said.