Malaysia is green and growingby | 12-02-2016 17:36 |
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MORE than 190 countries met in Paris last month, on the occasion of the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP 21), and reached a deal to address the issue of climate change. As always, forests and emissions from deforestation received attention throughout the conference. In this context, it is more important than ever to draw public attention to the Global Forest Resources Assessment (FRA) 2015 report from the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). The report is titled ?How Are The World?s Forests Changing?? scripts within 1 div tag with id, inlineAd1,inlineAd2> The FRA, produced every five years to provide a consistent approach to describing the world?s forests and how they are changing (source: www.fao.org), is the most comprehensive examination of forests worldwide, taking data from hundreds of sources and using teams of researchers from around the globe. Many NGOs have accused the palm oil industry of being a major cause of deforestation, particularly in Malaysia. It has been one of the key pillars of the campaigns to discredit palm oil. But the new data from the FRA changes this. Malaysia, one of the major players in the palm oil industry, is doing pretty well in terms of managing its forest resources. Indeed, Malaysia?s forest area today is 22,195,100ha or 67.6% (more than two-thirds) of the land area. In 2000, the coverage area was 21,591,000ha. Between 2010 and 2015, forest area has risen by 14,000ha per year. In other words, Malaysia?s forest area is increasing, not decreasing. Note that the primary forest is 5,041,1000ha (22.7% of forest area), other naturally regenerated forests are 15,188,000ha (68.4% of the total area), and with respect to planted forests, they represent 1,966,000ha or 8.9% of forest area. Even when looking at forest cover – which calculates at forest canopy cover and includes smaller blocks of trees – Malaysia?s numbers are impressive. Global Forest Watch, an initiative of the World Resources Institute, says Malaysia?s forest cover is around 29,000,000ha, upward of 80%. Malaysia?s numbers are all the more remarkable following the past 25 years (1990-2015), when the global forest area continued to decline gradually as the global population continued to grow. The positive aspect is that, as noted by the FAO report, ?the focus on sustainable forest management has never been so high: more lands are designated as permanent forest, we have established more action and monitoring, reporting, and planning and stakeholder involvement is greater every day, and there is an almost universal legal framework legislating on sustainable forest management. Larger areas are designated for the conservation of biodiversity and simultaneously forests have an increasingly important role in offering products and services.? The authors also note that in 1990 the world had 4.128 billion hectares of forest in 2015, this total area decreased to 3.999 billion hectares – bringing the terrestrial coverage rate down from 31.6% to 30.6% in 25 years. From this point view, Malaysia sets a good example, its forest area decreased only slightly over the past 25 years. The rate of its forest loss has effectively fallen to zero. The decrease in Malaysia?s forest area is smaller than the losses in developed countries such as Australia and Canada. |