Once our primary forests are gone, they’re gone forever
AT THE 2021 United Nations Climate Conference in Glasgow, 145 nations made a pledge to halt and reverse deforestation and land degradation by 2030. Almost three years later, the call for transformative action is ringing hollow.
Globally, 6.4 million hectares (ha) of forest were lost in 2023, and targets to reduce deforestation were missed in almost all tropical regions, according to the 2024 Forest Declaration Assessment.
Even more forest – 62.6 million ha – became degraded (meaning an area fell to a lower ecological integrity class) in 2022. Overall, the world is 45 per cent off its deforestation targets and, in a frustrating twist, forest-loss levels have risen above a 2018 to 2020 baseline since the pledge.
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