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Destruction of the Rainforest


 Map Showing Original Rainforest Cover

 Map Showing Rainforest Cover Today


The future of tropical forests

Every year millions of hectares of tropical forest disappear. It is estimated that between 1960 and 1990 more than 20 % of these forests were lost (33% in Asia and 18% in Africa and Latin America). To make matters worse, this process of destruction doesn't show any signs of stopping. In fact, current deforestation of the Amazon proceeds at an even greater speed than in the 1980s, when the issue started to arouse worldwide concern. Nevertheless, there is still time to revert this process.

Why do tropical forests disappear?

There are many causes of Rainforest destruction and they vary according to the different countries and regions. It is important to distinguish between the direct and the indirect (or underlying) causes. Among the direct causes of deforestation, some of the main ones are: the substitution of forests by other activities (agriculture, cattle-raising, tree plantations, shrimp farming, etc.), logging, mining and oil exploitation and the construction of large hydroelectric dams (which result in the flooding of extensive areas of forest).

 

In particular, it is necessary to emphasize the negative role that large scale tree plantations are playing as a direct cause of deforestation. These plantations, promoted as "planted forests" are in reality crops -and not forests- and they are generally preceded by the clear cutting of the native forest ecosystem and its substitution by agrosystems, such as large-scale monocrops of exotic species. Given the serious social and environmental impacts generated by them, the World Rainforest Movement has launched an international campaign against its promotion and in favour of socially and environmentally sustainable alternatives.

The underlying causes of deforestation are those behind the direct causes, which determine their occurrence. Let's see an example. An important number of peasants arrive to the forest in a certain country and start cutting and burning the forest in order to use the land for agriculture and cattle raising. That is the direct cause. The question is: why do these farmers arrive and act in that manner? Normally peasants migrate to the forest because in their native area they don't have enough agricultural land. Such situation originates in an inequitable land allocation policy. That is an underlying cause. But they are able to arrive in the forest because previously the government or the logging and mining companies had opened up roads into the forest. This is another underlying cause. In many cases the government promotes this migration in order to expand the agricultural frontier with the aim of increasing exports. This has several implicit underlying causes: the need to pay the external debt, policies imposed by international
financial institutions, the existence of consumer markets in the richer countries, among others.

The impacts of deforestation

What importance does deforestation have in general and on tropical forests in particular?
To forest peoples and other forest-dependent peoples, deforestation implies the loss of their possibilities of survival as independent cultures. For them, the forest is their home and provides them with food, medicines, building materials, firewood, water and all the material and spiritual elements that assure the long term survival of the community. The disappearance of the forest means the loss of all this, and consequently implies malnutrition, an increase in illnesses, dependency, and in many cases emigration and the disappearance of the community itself.

Secondly, deforestation results in impacts at the regional level. As forests assure the preservation of water, soils, plants and wildlife in general, their destruction cause -among other- serious impacts such as extensive flooding, aggravated droughts, soil erosion, the consequent pollution of watercourses and the appearance of pests due to a breakup in the ecological balance. Such impacts affect the lives and health of people at the regional level, as well as their productive activities, such as agriculture, cattle-raising, fishing, etc.

Finally, deforestation also implies serious impacts at the global level. Forests have important functions in relation to climate and their disappearance affect humanity as a whole. On the one hand, the vast forest cover helps to regulate the global climate regarding rain, temperature and wind regimes. On the other hand, they constitute an enormous carbon reservoir and their elimination contributes to the aggravation of the greenhouse effect (generated mainly by the use of fossil fuels). When they are burnt or cut down, the carbon that had been stored up for centuries in the forests is incorporated to the atmosphere, thereby increasing the level of carbon concentration in it and thus aggravating the greenhouse effect.

Additionally, tropical forests are home to a large part of the planet's biodiversity. Both animal and plant species tend to disappear together with the forests and the rate of species' extinction increasingly accelerates.

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