Asia's
Forests Fast Receding
By Dr.
Michael A. Bengwayan
The
destruction of Asia's forests continues at an alarming pace, averaging 1.8
million hectares a year or 5,000 hectares a day. Frantic governments are
instituting measures to arrest the rapid decline but, so far, the success has
been very limited.
This is the
grim assessment of the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization
(UNFAO) after a comprehensive survey of Asia's forest resources. UNFAO
conducted the survey with the United Nations Development Program or UNDP.
Deforestation
is heaviest in Southeast Asia which produces some of the world's best timber.
According to the survey, Indonesia's annual deforestation rate of 500,000
hectares is the highest in the region. Second is Thailand with 333,000
hectares; the range of between 100,000 to 150,000 for West Papua, Malaysia,
India, Laos, Philippines and, Burma.
These
countries were among the Asian and Pacific nations covered in the study. The
others are Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Kampuchea, Nepal, Papua New Guinea and
Vietnam.
The End of
Virgin Forests
The ravaging
is felt most by Asia's closed or virgin forests which totals over 300 million
hectares. The survey said that from 1976 to 1980 alone, the total closed forest
ravaged was more than nine million hectares.
The figure
leveled off in the next five years to 1.82 million hectares per year.
But even at
this rate, Asia's virgin forests were reduced to just more than 270,000 million
hectares after year 2000. The region's annual rate of deforestation of closed
forests is between 0.60 to 1.2 percent.
From 1981 t0
1985, the deforestation rate was its worst in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Malaysia,
Kampuchea, Philippines; while there was a decrease in Thailand, Laos, Brunei
and India.
The other
Asian countries had either slight deforestation increases. But other countries
turned from being wood exporters to timber importers.
Take the
case of Thailand, to keep its sawmill industry rolling, the country has become
increasingly dependent on log exports.
From a net
exporter, with depletion of forest resources, ban on exports and growing demand
for wood, Thailand has become a net importer.
Sizable
import of logs started in 1977 and increased even after 2000, mostly from
Malaysia and Indonesia.
Loggers No Longer
Are the Only Culprits
The
UNFAO-UNDP study said unlike before, loggers are no longer mainly to blame for
the rapid destruction of forests. The report noted that forest resources were
ravaged faster in areas with high population density and where shifting
cultivation have not been effectively stopped.
Population
pressure on Asia's existing forest resources, is undeniable, unorganized and
spontaneous encroachments, squatting, migration b y lowlanders--manifestations
of increasing demand for cultivable land by the landless and unemployed rural
poor--are already accounting for considerable for deforestation, warned the UN
bodies.
This form of
deforestation is more prevalent in the Philippines where almost all the
culprits are landless tenants, farm laborers or just plain land speculators.
In Nepal,
the population pressure on the hills has caused people to migrate to the plains
or terai and encroach into forest land.
Over in
Thailand, unrest in neighboring countries has let loose a flood of refugees
contributing heavily to deforestation.
Slash and
burn agriculture or shifting cultivation also wrecks havoc to Asia's forest
resources. The practice is variously known throughout the region as kaingin,
jhum, chena or podu. Available figures indicate that more than 75 million
Asians depend on shifting cultivation for livelihood. The extent of forests
affected is over 200 million hectares.
Shifting
Cultivation
Examples
abound: In Bangladesh, jhuming is practiced by 26 tribes living in the
Chittagong Hill Tracts region involving almost a million people. The overall
effects are loss of timber, water, and soil and the decline of the capacity of
the land to produce agricultural crops.
In India,
shifting cultivation is practiced in 12 states where some 7 million people are
involved in an area of more than one million hectares; the northeastern states
of Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura and Mhegalaya
account 80 percent of India's shifting cultivation population.
Shifting
cultivation is also practiced by more than 20 million Indonesians. However, it
is confined in the islands of Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Maluku and
Nusatenggara. Over 20 million hectares of forest have been adversely affected
from the viewpoint of soil cover and soil fertility.
Timber...
More Timber
As Asia's
population increases, so does the demand for timber and fuelwood. And this in
no small measure, contributes to the destruction of forest resources. Estimates
are that of all wood cut in Asia, over half for timber, one third for fuel,
most of which are consumed by the region's poor. The oil price hikes yearly is
exacerbating the situation.
Logging
operations particularly in Southeast Asia has been merciless plus the fact that
millions of hectares are being cleared of trees in Indonesia to accommodate
palm oil plantations.
The
UNFAO-UNDP study said that forests are major foreign exchange earners by many
cash-strapped developing Asian countries but also asks " Is it worth
it?"
“No”, it
concluded because,"the full amount of export value cannot be viewed as
representing a benefit to the exporting country.”
Simply said,
no amount of money can ever compensate for the destruction done to the
contribution forests do for humanity and the whole of creation.
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