Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Tropical forests unprotected, survey finds

Two thirds have sustainable policies but only 5 percent managed that way

Andre Penner / AP
Illegally cut timber sits at the entrance to Ibama, Brazil's environmental protection agency, in Itaituba. A new report cites Brazil as having improved forest policies, while also emphasizing that plans need to be enforced.
Slide show
  Paving the Amazon
View images of how parts of Brazil’s Amazon have changed as settlers move in.
Video: Environment  
Who needs hybrids?
July 25: Is it better to drive a fuel-efficient Honda instead of a hybrid? Two automotive experts discuss the issue.

  Photo features  
  More
Image: Youth summer camp
AFP - Getty Images
  The Week in Pictures
A gaggle of geese, Russians in training and a refreshing California moment highlight a week of images.
image: Fish give a pedicure
AP
PhotoBlog
View and discuss the pictures and issues that caught our eyes.
MSNBC News Services
updated 10:53 a.m. ET May 26, 2006

MEXICO CITY - Almost all the world’s tropical forests remain effectively unprotected even though two-thirds have been designated for some sort of preservation over the past two decades, according to a new survey.

The study of tropical forest management by the International Tropical Timber Organization surveyed 2 billion acres — two-thirds of the world’s tropical forests — in 33 countries.

All of those forests were designated by the governments and landowners overseeing them as being under “sustainable management,” meaning they were completely protected as conservation areas, or designated as sites where economic activities such as logging were only allowed if they didn’t destroy the forest.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

However, the group said that what it called “the most extensive survey ever” found that less than 5 percent of these forests were managed in a sustainable way last year.

Scientists say tropical forests serve important environmental functions by providing habitat to countless species of plant and animal life, increasing rainfall and humidity, and helping to fight global warming by reducing carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere.

Rainforests under sustainable management are roughly the size of Germany, but an area a third of that magnitude is being cleared each year for timber or crops, the ITTO said in a report that took four years to compile.

Figures by region
In Latin America and the Caribbean, 1.3 billion acres were designated for sustainable management, but only 27 million acres were actually protected.

In Asia and the Pacific, 415 million acres were earmarked for sustainable management, but only 48 million acres were managed that way. In Africa, only 14.8 million acres of 272 million designated acres were being protected.

The timber organization, which has 59 member nations representing most of the world’s countries with tropical forests, was formed under the auspices of the United Nations in 1986 amid global concern about disappearing tropical forests.

Its mission is to promote forest management that retains the “inherent values” of the forest while allowing businesses like timber to support local communities, the report said, adding: “It hasn’t always worked.”

“Some countries have already lost a significant part of their natural forest heritage,” the study said.

5 percent a big increase
On a positive note, the report noted that the nearly 5 percent of the land that is being managed correctly marks a drastic increase since the group first surveyed the forests: about 89 million acres in 2005 compared to less than 2.5 million acres in 1988.

“It does give us some hope that sustainable forest management is a viable land-use option and will continue to expand,” one of the editors of the report, Alastair Sarre, said in a telephone interview from Australia.

Still, sustainable management isn’t as profitable, at least over the short term, as illegal logging, agriculture and other uses, he said.

Other obstacles include poor government coordination with local communities and landowners; inadequate resources for enforcement, management and monitoring; armed conflicts that cause social and economic disruption; and long-standing land ownership disputes.

The least progress has been made in countries beset by civil war or other conflicts, such as Central African Republic, Ivory Coast and Liberia, the report said.


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Search Jobs

Find your next car

Find Your Dream Home

Find a business to start

$7 trades, no fee IRAs