African
Logging Decimating Pristine Forests, Report Warns
by:
Stefan Lovgren 7 June 2007

Industrial logging is increasingly
gobbling up Africa's tropical forests, satellite
data shows (see
pictures).
Researchers
studied 300 satellite images covering more than 1.5
million square miles (4 million square kilometers)
to track the expansion of logging roads from 1976
to 2003.
The data
suggests that 30 percent of forests in six central
African countries are under ownership of private
logging companies. Logging is the most extensive
form of land use in the region.
In
contrast, about 12 percent of the forests are set
aside for conservation.
The new
study represents the first comprehensive satellite
mapping of central Africa's dense and humid
forests.
(See
related: "Aerial
Survey Documents Africa's Last Wild Places"
[August 17, 2005].)
"This
is the first time we've been able to see how vast
the imprint of the logging is on the
landscape," said study lead author Nadine
LaPorte, director of the Africa program at the
Woods Hole Research Center in Falmouth,
Massachusetts.
Inroads
for Logging
Central
Africa's tropical forests have long been considered
among the most pristine on Earth.
(Get rainforest
photos, facts, more.)
However,
there are now more than 230,000 square miles
(600,000 square kilometers) of forest under logging
concessions in six central African countries:
Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of the
Congo, Central African Republic, and the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (see a map
of the region).
The
researchers mapped more than 32,000 miles (52,000
kilometers) of logging roads within this region.
They found that logging roads account for 38
percent of the length of all roads in the area
studied.
In the Republic of the Congo, the total
length of logging roads is two times that of the
national roads, LaPorte said.
The
highest logging-road densities were found in the
coastal nations of Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, and
Gabon.
Historically
most of the logging in Africa is for export,
LaPorte said, so the practice is often done close
to the coastline and the ports.
Logging
in Cameroon
has extended inland in recent decades after the
earlier harvesting of coastal forest, she added.
Most of
the logging in central Africa focuses on high-value
trees like mahogany that are exported for use in
furniture in Europe and Asia.
In
contrast, most of the wood in Brazil's Amazon
forest is used domestically.
A New
Frontier
Documenting
the growth of logging roads enables scientists to
understand the extent to which the environment is
being changed.
The study
found that the area undergoing the most rapid
change was in northern Republic of the Congo, where
the rate of road construction has grown about four
times over the three decades.
But
LaPorte warns that a "new frontier" of
logging expansion may also be opened in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, known as the DRC,
as that country achieves greater political
stability and attracts interest from foreign
logging companies.
(See
related: "Endangered
Gorillas 'Held Hostage' by Rebels in Africa
Park" [May 23, 2007].)
The DRC,
which is about the size of western Europe, contains
almost two-thirds of the region's remaining
forests.
The
study, which will appear tomorrow in the journal Science,
shows that the DRC has the lowest logging-road
density—at least that has been measured thus far.
But the country's population density is three times
greater than that of its Republic of the Congo
neighbor.
"We
should be very concerned about logging in areas
where we have high population density,"
LaPorte said.
"If
you have lots of people and you do logging at the
same time, what happens is you're going to have
deforestation," she said, "and you will
go from a forest ecosystem to an agricultural
system."
Robert
Nasi of the Center for International Forestry
Research in Montpellier, France, said the paper is
a "useful resume" about the expansion of
roads in Central Africa. But, he said, it also
seems "short of many approximations or [has]
missing information."
Nasi
added that roads drive development in places like
central Africa.
"With
roads come all the blessings#8212;access to
medication, access to markets for your
products—and all the curses of development ...
[such as] increased harvesting of natural resources
and agricultural encroachment."
Carbon
Impacts
The
shrinking of Africa's tropical forests could also
have global climate change implications,
researchers warn.
Forests
store up to half of the Earth's terrestrial carbon
stock, or 45 times the amount of carbon emitted
every year through the burning of fossil fuels and
the production of cement.
The DRC
is estimated to hold 8 percent of the Earth's
carbon, which is stored in living forests,
according to a recent report by the environmental
group Greenpeace.
The DRC's
intact rain forests "act as a break on further
acceleration of climate change by serving as a vast
carbon reserve," said Phil Aikman,
international forest campaigner for Greenpeace in
London.
When
forests are cleared for agriculture or other use,
up to half of the carbon they held may be emitted
into the atmosphere, the report said.
The
Greenpeace report authors write: "Given the
pivotal role of the forest in terms of climate
change, it is deeply worrying that to date no
concrete steps have been taken to stop degradation
of the DRC's forests."
|