Rich nation appetites driving tropical deforestation

Mar 30th at 20:58
30-03-2021 20:58:02+07:00

Rich nation appetites driving tropical deforestation

Rising demand in wealthy countries for dozens of commodities ranging from coffee to soybeans has stepped up the pace of deforestation in tropical countries like Brazil, Indonesia and Vietnam.

A man harvests coffee beans in Kon Tum Province in the Central Highlands, December 2020. Photo by Nguyen Ngoc Thai.

Even as North America and Europe expand forest cover within their own borders, efforts to slow forest loss in the global south through offset schemes and direct payments have been overwhelmed by these appetites, researchers said in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.

The first country-by-country quantification of how rich-nation imports drive deforestation showed that each person in G7 nations accounts for, on average, the loss of four trees somewhere else in the world per year.

In 2015, the last year for which figures were available across all the datasets examined, that totaled more than three billion trees, the researchers found.

In five of those G7 nations -- Japan, Germany, France, Britain and Italy -- 91 to 99 percent of their "deforestation footprint" was in foreign countries, half of that in the tropics.

That footprint has grown most rapidly in China and India, but per capita tree loss is still far below that of rich nations.

"Most forests are in poorer countries that are overwhelmed with economic incentives to cut them down," lead author Nguyen Tien Hoang, an expert in environmental modeling and mapping at the Research Institute for Humanity and Nature in Kyoto, told AFP.

"We show that richer countries are encouraging deforestation through demand for commodities."

Combining data on forest loss and global supply chains, Hoang and his colleague Keiichiro Kanemoto showed which nations were buying what commodities from where.

Cocoa and coffee

Cocoa consumption in Germany, for example, "poses a very high risk to forests" in Ivory Coast and Ghana, Hoang noted.

Deforestation in coastal Tanzania, meanwhile, is directly linked to Japanese demand for agricultural products.

In Vietnam, forest loss in the Central Highlands is mainly driven by coffee drinkers in the U.S., Germany and Italy, while in northern Vietnam the culprit is exports to China, South Korea and Japan.

Palm oil -- used in food products and biofuels -- is the main instigator of forest loss in Indonesia, while large swathes of forest in Brazil are destroyed to make way for beef, soybean and sugarcane production.

Among wealthy nations, France has the highest rate of per capita tropical deforestation, with 21 square meters (220 square feet) lost in 2015.

Germany and Norway were close behind, with Japan, Mexico and the U.S. responsible, per capita, for about 16 square meters of cleared forest that year, whether through burning or timber harvesting.

"The richest and most biodiverse ecosystem among forests are in the tropics," said Hoang.

Forests cover more than 30 percent of Earth's land surface, and tropical forests are home to between 50 and 90 percent of all terrestrial species.

In 2019, a football pitch of primary, old-growth trees was destroyed in the tropics every six seconds -- about 38,000 square kilometers (14,500 square miles) in all, according to satellite data.

Preliminary data suggest the primary forest destruction in 2020 may have accelerated.

Vnexpress





NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Six more petrol stations in HCMC, Long An under inspection

The Dong Nai police have cordoned off and inspected six more petrol stations in HCMC and Long An for their alleged involvement in a 2.7-million-liter poor-quality...

Nghi Son 2 Thermal Power Plant – Phase 1 connected to national grid

The first 500kV transmission line connecting Nghi Son 2 Thermal Power Plant to the national electricity grid was put into operation on March 26.

LNG driving FDI picture so far in 2021

As per a newly-issued investment certificate, VinaCapital GS Energy Pte., Ltd., a joint venture between South Korea’s GS Energy and VinaCapital, is to build a...

Vietnam’s plastics exporters eye new opportunities in Europe

Exports to the EU currently account for about 18.2 percent of the Vietnamese plastics sector’s export value. The EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) promises...

AEON to build $190-mln shopping mall in northern province

Japanese retailer AEON has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Bac Ninh Province People's Committee for building a $190-million shopping mall in 2022.

Direct power purchase mechanism – a new entrant to be for Vietnam power sector

The Electricity Regulatory Authority of Vietnam under the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) has released a draft circular guiding the implementation of the...

Many Vietnamese exporters see profit soar during COVID-19

Many Vietnamese exporters have seen a sudden increase in profits during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Vietnamese firms advised to promote online sale in Singapore

Vietnamese enterprises are looking to sell their products online in Singapore where 73 per cent of its population regularly shop online and make cross-border...

Southern provinces to expand industrial parks

Provinces in the southern region plan to expand industrial parks (IPs) and continue improving the business climate to lure foreign investment following the...

Vietnam’s exports to the UK soar

Vietnam’s exports have created breakthroughs to the UK market in the initial months of the year following implementation of the UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement...


MOST READ


Back To Top