BEIJING, March 20 (Xinhuanet) -- Imagine an area of
forest the size of England disappearing in one year. If that's too difficult to
get a handle on, try imagining a forest twice the size of Paris disappearing
every day.
According to a new United Nations report, that's exactly what is happening worldwide -- and it's said to be a
change for the better.
"Deforestation continues and it continues at an
unacceptable rate, however there are signs of potential change," said Wulf
Killmann, a forestry expert at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) which
published the report.
In addition to reducing habitat for wildlife,
disappearing forests also add to the greenhouse effect because the carbon
stored in trees is released into the atmosphere.
Deforestation accounts for 18 percent of the carbon
dioxide produced each year, a significant proportion of the emissions scientists
say are causing global warming, which also poses risks to forests via increased
fires and the spread of pests.
Demand for agricultural land is one of the main
reasons forests continue to be erased at the rate of 13 million hectares a
year -- the size of England.
However, moves by some countries to replant forests
has meant the annual net loss has dropped from around 9 million hectares in the
1990s to 7.3 million, according to the "State of the World's Forests 2007"
report.
For example, a huge tree planting program in China
more than offset large-scale deforestation in other parts of Asia such as
Indonesia, to produce a net increase in the amount of forested land in the
Asia-Pacific region during the first five years of the decade.
China's economic boom has driven demand for wood and
the country has adopted a tree planting policy, not only to reduce its reliance
on imported timber, but also for soil protection, especially in areas near the
Gobi desert, Killmann said.
In Africa and Latin America, there are fewer positive
signs.
Forested land in Latin America -- home to the Amazon
-- fell to less than half of the continent's area. By 2005, forests were
estimated at 47 percent of the total land, from 51 percent in 1990.
More than half of global deforestation in the period
2000-2005 happened in Africa, the report said, underlining its
conclusion poverty and war are major contributors to forest destruction.
(Agencies)