From: Reuters
Published July 14, 2008 09:17 AM
Population boom will pressure forests: reports
LONDON (Reuters) - Booming demand for food, fuel and wood as the world's
population surges from six to nine billion will put unprecedented and
unsustainable demand on the world's remaining forests, two new reports said
on Monday.
The reports from the U.S.-based Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI) said
this massive potential leap in deforestation could add to global warming and
put pressure on indigenous forest dwellers that could lead to conflict.
"Arguably we are on the verge of the last great global land grab," said
Andy White, co-author of "Seeing People Through the Trees," one of the two
reports.
"Unless steps are taken, traditional forest owners, and the forests
themselves, will be the big losers. It will mean more deforestation, more
conflict, more carbon emissions, more climate change and less prosperity for
everyone."
RRI is a global coalition of environmental and conservation non-government
organizations with a particular focus on forest protection and management
and the rights of forest peoples.
White's report said that unless agricultural productivity rises sharply, new
land equivalent in size to 12 Germanys will have to be cultivated for crops
to meet food and biofuel demand by 2030.
Virtually all of it is likely to be in developing countries, principally
land that is currently forested.
The second report, "From Exclusion to Ownership", noted that governments
still claim ownership of most forests in developing countries, but said they
had done little to ensure the rights and tenure of forest dwellers.
It said people whose main source of livelihood is the forests were usually
the best custodians of the forests and their biodiversity.
RRI said governments were failing to prevent industrial incursions into
indigenous lands. Its report noted that cultivation of soy and sugar cane
for biofuels in Brazil is expected to require up to 128 million hectares of
land by 2020, up from 28 million hectares now, with much of it likely to
come from deforestation in the Amazon.
"We face a deficit of democracy plagued by violent conflict and human rights
abuses," said Ghanaian civil rights lawyer Kyeretwie Opoku, commenting on
the reports.
"We must address underlying inequalities by consulting and allowing forest
peoples to make decisions the themselves regarding the actions of industry
and conservation," he added.
(Reporting by Jeremy Lovell; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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