As this decade comes to a close we ran across an interesting statistic produced by the Royal Statistical Society in the UK. In fact it was the societies statistic of the decade and one that is nothing to write home about-deforestation of the Amazon rainforest.
The estimated accumulated deforestation of the Amazon being equivalent to around 8.4 million football pitches or about 24,000 square miles. In a decade!
A recent article in the Conversation provides further insight into this statistic describing some of the more obvious consequences of this deforestation and rebutting arguments that conversion of the rainforest to ranching, resource extraction and farming is required for economic benefits of nations and the people within those nations. In fact there is data to suggest that if left alone the economic benefits of the amazon rainforest outweigh its destruction for short-term profits. However, another recent article suggests the worst is yet to come in the deforestation of the Amazon. With the cost of reforestation at over $2,000 an acre cost alone, not to mention political forces, make restoration less likely day by day.
The amazon rainforest has been called the lungs of the earth breathing in carbon dioxide and stabilizing the earth’s climate and exhaling oxygen-oxygen that fuels life animal life in all its myriad forms.
- One in ten known species on our planet including over 2,000 species of animals and probably more plant species than can be counted.
- Half of the earths remaining tropical rain forests.
- Over 4,000 river
- Over 2.6 million square miles.
A grim statistic to have won the honor of statistic of the decade but one we ought to heed as we move forward into the next.
It is hard to appreciate this fact for us living far from the Amazon in places already striped of natural landscapes. However, when we drive past a once fertile farm field just down the road now being plowed over for a new round of strip malls we get an inkling of what the future holds. A planet impoverished for the enrichment of a few, until it all falls apart.
Perhaps the statistic of the next decade in 2030 will something like this “the decade humanity work together to solve the climate crisis for the good of all”.I know it’s not really a statistic but we will be able to quantify the results and turn that into the next statistic of the decade.
Thank you for keeping us informed.
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Your welcome.
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Sobering stats, but I love that you ended with hope for a miracle we can all work towards. Coincidentally, I was just speaking today to my son about how in 1979 I flew from Lima to Caracas and for 5 hours straight underneath me was unbroken jungle. I doubt the view would be the same today. A huge loss.
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Hi Eliza, yes I bet a long flight over undisturbed rainforest is not attainable these days. Hard to imaging that so much could change in just 40 years. The next 40 will tell quite a tale for humanity.
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We live in hope.
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Yes we do.
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May your wish for the next decade come true!
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Thanks Tanja and a very happy new year to you.We know its asking for a lot and will probably take near collapse before substantial actions are taken but what the heck…gotta dream big.
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Let’s hope we can change the trajectory BEFORE the collapse!
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I do hope that can be done.
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