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Deforestation and Its Extreme Effect on Global Warming

publisherLekoch

time2019/10/23

Deforestation and Its Extreme Effect on Global Warming

From logging, agricultural production and other economic activities, deforestation adds more atmospheric CO2 than the sum total of cars and trucks on the world's roads

 

The reason that logging is so bad for the climate is that when trees are felled they release the carbon they are storing into the atmosphere, where it mingles with greenhouse gases from other sources and contributes to global warming accordingly. We should be doing as much to prevent deforestation as we are to increase fuel efficiency and reduce automobile usage.

 

According to the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), a leading green group, 32 million acres of tropical rainforest were cut down each year between 2000 and 2009 and the pace of deforestation is increasing.


It’s hard to convince the poor residents (developing countries) near the Amazon forests and other tropical regions of the world to stop cutting down trees when the forests are still worth more dead than alive. “Conservation costs money, while profits from timber, charcoal, pasture and cropland drive people to cut down forests,” says EDF. Exacerbating global warming isn’t the only negative impact of tropical deforestation. It also wipes out biodiversity: More than half of the world’s plant and animal species live in tropical rainforests.

 

One way some tropical countries are reducing deforestation is through participation in the United Nations’ Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) program. Examples include using less land (and therefore cutting fewer trees) for activities such as coffee growing and meat and milk production. Participating nations can then accrue and sell carbon pollution credits when they can prove they have lowered deforestation below a baseline.

 

Brazil is among the countries embracing REDD among other efforts to reduce carbon emissions. Thanks to the program, Brazil has slowed deforestation within its borders by 40 percent since 2008 and is on track to achieve an 80 percent reduction by 2020. Environmentalists are optimistic that the initial success of REDD in Brazil bodes well for reducing deforestation in other parts of the tropics as well.

 

 

Knowing over what happened? What can we do instead of making things worse, we decided to have a win-win solution, which is using bamboo fibre as the main ingredients of our newly released product. To think again, would it be better if we contribute over small things like using a biodegradable product. What do you think? Are you in?

 

I will always pay attention to my own behavior, and choose environmentally friendly products in daily necessities. I believe that as long as each of us behaves well, everything will get better and better;