Deforestation in Indonesia
Exact rates of Indonesian deforestation have varied with different
figures quoted by researchers and government, but a new study, which
claims to be the most comprehensive yet, suggests that nearly twice as
much primary forest is being cut down as in Brazil, the historical
global leader...
In 2012, she calculates, Indonesia lost 840,000 hectares of its primary
forest, compared to 460,000 hectares in Brazil, despite its forest being
roughly a quarter the size of the Amazon. This, says Margano, was the
most lost by any country...
But the figures are potentially embarrassing because they suggest that a
2011 moratorium on granting new licenses for clearing or logging of
primary forests and carbon-rich peatlands could have been a driver for
deforestation.
Margono and co-author Matthew Hansen said the new
data from remote sensing showed that the extra losses came largely from
the felling of primary forest in wetlands and in government-protected
areas.
More grim details at
The Guardian.
No comments:
Post a Comment