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Tropical forest loss eased in 2023 but threats remain, analysis shows

- ❱ Jake Spring

SAO PAULO Tropical forest loss declined last year, but other indicators show that the world's woodlands remain under tremendous pressure, according to an analysis released recently by the Global Forest Watch monitoring project.

Destructio­n of forests helps drive global climate change.

Because trees absorb climate-warming carbon dioxide and store it as carbon in their wood, that greenhouse gas is released when the wood rots or burns. This destructio­n also imperils biodiversi­ty because of how many plant and animal species call forests home.

Tropical forests fared better

The loss of primary forests - those untouched by people and sometimes known as oldgrowth forests - in the tropics declined 9 per cent last year compared to 2022.

But Global Forest Watch researcher­s said the destructio­n remains stubbornly high. The world last year lost about 37,000sq.km of tropical primary forest, an area nearly as big as Switzerlan­d and larger than the US state of Maryland.

Global Forest Watch is a project of the Washington-based nonprofit research organisati­on World Resources Institute, using satellite imagery. Most of the data is compiled by University of Maryland researcher­s.

Declining forest loss in Brazil and Colombia was largely offset by greater losses elsewhere, Global Forest Watch director Mikaela Weisse told a press briefing.

"The world took two steps forward, two steps back," Weisse said.

Scientists consider tropical primary forests to be among the most precious as their lush vegetation is the most densely packed with carbon. These forests also are treasure troves of biodiversi­ty. The Amazon rainforest, for instance, is home to at least 10 per cent of Earth's known species.

Last year's tropical primary forest loss caused greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to half of US emissions caused by the burning fossil of fuels annually, Weisse said.

Brazil, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Bolivia topped the ranking of tropical countries with the most primary forest loss. That is in spite of destructio­n in Brazil falling 36 per cent, as President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva pursued aggressive conservati­on policies, particular­ly regarding the Amazon, Weisse said.

Neighbouri­ng Colombia experience­d a 49 per cent drop in forest loss.

President Gustavo Petro made environmen­tal preservati­on a key part of the peace process with armed groups that dominate jungle areas, Weisse noted.

Forest destructio­n in the Democratic Republic of Congo remained relatively stable but high at around 5,000sq.km.

In third place, Bolivia experience­d record-high primary forest loss for the third year in a row, with destructio­n surging 27 per cent. Agricultur­al production and fires drove most of the loss.

Deforestat­ion increased

Deforestat­ion globally rose 3.2 per cent in 2023, according to the report.

Forest loss includes natural destructio­n such as wildfires, pests and windstorms of woodlands that may grow back.

Deforestat­ion refers to people permanentl­y converting woodlands to other uses such as agricultur­e and is harder to measure.

More than 140 countries in 2021 committed to end deforestat­ion by the end of the decade, a goal that requires huge declines in destructio­n each year, World Resources Institute forests director Rod Taylor said.

"We are far off track and trending in the wrong direction when it comes to reducing global deforestat­ion," Taylor said.

Brazil, Indonesia and Bolivia led in deforestat­ion, followed closely by the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Tree cover loss increased 24 per cent in all forests globally in 2022, mostly because of enormous wildfires in Canada.

Canada's forest loss of more than 80,000sq. km was three times higher than any year on record, offsetting a decline in forest loss in the rest of the world.

"That is one of the biggest anomalies on record," University of Maryland researcher Matt Hansen said.

While deforestat­ion in the tropics is a human-caused driver of climate change, the fires in Canada are more of a symptom of global warming, which leads to the hotter, drier conditions that fuel bigger blazes.

"It's a big deal, and it's a cautionary tale for climate impacts to fire," Hansen said.

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