The Rainforest: tropical forest facts, photos, and information (original) (raw)

By Rhett A. Butler Last updated Aug 14, 2020

A Place Out of Time: Tropical Rainforests and the Perils They Face - information on tropical forests, deforestation, and biodiversity

RAINFOREST FACTS

Sections:

BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON THE RAINFOREST

Rainforests are forest ecosystems characterized by high levels of rainfall, an enclosed canopy and high species diversity. While tropical rainforests are the best-known type of rainforest and the focus of this section of the web site, rainforests are actually found widely around the world, including temperate regions in Canada, the United States, and the former Soviet Union.

Tropical rainforests typically occur in the equatorial zone between the Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn, latitudes that have warm temperatures and relatively constant year-round sunlight. Tropical rainforests merge into other types of forest depending on the altitude, latitude, and various soil, flooding, and climate conditions. These forest types form a mosaic of vegetation types which contribute to the incredible diversity of the tropics.

The bulk of the world's tropical rainforest occurs in the Amazon Basin in South America. The Congo Basin and Southeast Asia, respectively, have the second and third largest areas of tropical rainforest. Rainforests also exist on some the Caribbean islands, in Central America, in India, on scattered islands in the South Pacific, in Madagascar, in West and East Africa outside the Congo Basin, in Central America and Mexico, and in parts of South America outside the Amazon. Brazil has the largest extent of rainforest of any country on Earth.

Rainforests provide important ecological services, including storing hundreds of billions of tons of carbon, buffering against flood and drought, stabilizing soils, influencing rainfall patterns, and providing a home to wildlife and Indigenous people. Rainforests are also the source of many useful products upon which local communities depend.

While rainforests are critically important to humanity, they are rapidly being destroyed by human activities. The biggest cause of deforestation is conversion of forest land for agriculture. In the past subsistence agriculture was the primary driver of rainforest conversion, but today industrial agriculture — especially monoculture and livestock production — is the dominant driver of rainforest loss worldwide. Logging is the biggest cause of forest degradation and usually proceeds deforestation for agriculture.

Organization of this site

The rainforest section of Mongabay is divided into ten "chapters" (the original text for the site was a book, but has since been adapted for the web), with add-on content in the form of special focal sections (e.g. The Amazon, the Congo, REDD, New Guinea, Sulawesi, Forests in Brazil, etc), appendices, and other resources.

There is also a version of the site geared toward younger readers at kids.mongabay.com.

Tropical rainforest in Borneo. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

ABOUT THE RAINFOREST (SUMMARY)

Chapter 1:

RAINFOREST DISTRIBUTION AND CHARACTERISTICS

Each rainforest is unique, but there are certain features common to all tropical rainforests.

The global distribution of tropical rainforests can be broken up into four biogeographical realms based roughly on four forested continental regions: the Afrotropical, the Australiasian, the Indomalayan/Asian, and the Neotropical. Just over half the world's rainforests lie in the Neotropical realm, roughly a quarter are in Africa, and a fifth in Asia.

Map showing the world's rainforests, defined as primary forests in the tropics. Click to enlarge.

These realms can be further divided into major tropical forest regions based on biodiversity hotspots, including:

  1. Amazon: Includes parts of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname, Venezuela
  2. Congo: Includes parts of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of Congo
  3. Australiasia: Includes parts of Australia, Indonesian half of New Guinea, Papua New Guinea
  4. Sundaland: Includes parts of Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore
  5. Indo-Burma: Includes parts of Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam
  6. Mesoamerica: Includes parts of Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama
  7. Wallacea: Sulawesi and the Maluku islands in Indonesia
  8. West Africa: Includes parts of Benin, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Togo
  9. Atlantic forest: Includes parts of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay
  10. Choco: Includes parts of Colombia, Ecuador, Panama

Dozens of countries have tropical forests. The countries with the largest areas of tropical forest are:

Other countries that have large areas of rainforest include Bolivia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ecuador, Gabon, Guyana, India, Laos, Malaysia, Mexico, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, Republic of Congo, Suriname, and Venezuela.

Cover and loss by rainforest region

Primary forest extent Tree cover extent
Rainforest region 2001 2010 2020 2001 2010 2020
Amazon 556.7 543.5 526.2 673.4 658.6 628.9
Congo 173.7 172.2 167.6 301.2 300.3 287.7
Australiasia 61.8 65.4 64.4 76.3 91.3 89.1
Sundaland 39.9 57.3 51.0 67.7 121.6 103.1
Indo-Burma 15.3 42.6 40.1 37.8 153.0 139.1
Mesoamerica 43.7 17.4 16.0 160.3 54.3 49.8
Wallacea 18.1 15.2 14.6 56.2 26.1 24.5
West Africa 9.8 10.9 10.2 15.6 48.5 41.8
Atlantic forest 11.1 9.7 9.3 49.3 96.3 89.0
Choco 10.0 8.5 8.4 99.8 15.9 15.6
PAN-TROPICS 1,029.6 1,006.5 969.1 2,028.3 1,959.4 1,839.1
Primary forest loss Tree cover change
2002-09 2010-19 2002-09 2010-19
Rainforest region M ha (%) M ha (%) M ha (%) M ha (%)
Amazon -13.18 (-2.4%) -17.28 (-3.2%) -14.7 (-2.2%) -29.8 (-4.5%)
Congo -1.46 (-0.8%) -4.68 (-2.7%) -0.8 (-0.3%) -12.7 (-4.2%)
Australiasia -0.29 (-0.5%) -0.86 (-1.3%) 0.2 (0.2%) -1.4 (-1.5%)
Sundaland -2.22 (-5.5%) -3.67 (-6.4%) -1.5 (-2.3%) -9.5 (-7.8%)
Indo-Burma -1.62 (-10.5%) -2.14 (-5.0%) -0.6 (-1.6%) -6.4 (-4.2%)
Mesoamerica -1.10 (-2.5%) -2.51 (-14.4%) -7.3 (-4.6%) -13.9 (-25.6%)
Wallacea -0.66 (-3.6%) -1.36 (-8.9%) -1.9 (-3.3%) -4.6 (-17.5%)
West Africa -0.30 (-3.1%) -0.50 (-4.6%) -0.1 (-0.8%) -1.2 (-2.4%)
Atlantic forest -0.24 (-2.1%) -0.62 (-6.4%) -0.7 (-1.5%) -6.8 (-7.0%)
Choco -0.33 (-3.3%) -0.35 (-4.1%) -3.5 (-3.5%) -7.3 (-46.0%)
PAN-TROPICS -23.11 (-2.2%) -37.34 (-3.7%) -68.9 (-3.4%) -120.3 (-6.1%)

Bar chart showing the world's largest rainforests as defined by the area of primary forest cover according to Hansen / WRI 2020.

Bar chart showing the world's largest rainforests as defined by the area of primary forest cover according to Hansen / WRI 2020.

Tropical primary forest cover and tree cover by country in 2020

Tropical forest cover and loss by country

Units: million hectares Primary forest extent Tree cover extent2001
Country 2001 2010 2020 2001 2010 2020
Brazil 343.2 331.9 318.7 516.4 498.1 468.2
DR Congo 104.6 103.4 99.8 198.8 198.5 188.0
Indonesia 93.8 90.2 84.4 159.8 157.7 141.7
Colombia 54.8 54.2 53.3 81.6 81.7 79.3
Peru 69.1 68.5 67.2 77.9 78.6 76.5
Bolivia 40.8 39.9 38.1 64.4 62.7 58.9
Venezuela 38.6 38.5 38.1 56.4 57.3 56.1
Angola 2.5 2.4 2.3 49.7 48.3 46.8
Central African Republic 7.4 7.3 7.2 46.9 47.1 46.6
Papua New Guinea 32.6 32.4 31.9 42.9 42.9 41.9
Mexico 9.2 9.0 8.6 43.3 42.5 40.3
China 1.7 1.7 1.7 42.8 41.1 38.5
Myanmar 14.0 13.8 13.5 42.8 40.9 38.2
India 10.2 10.1 9.9 35.1 31.4 30.2
Cameroon 19.1 19.0 18.5 30.6 29.7 28.7
Republic of Congo 21.2 21.1 20.8 26.4 26.6 26.0
Argentina 4.4 4.2 4.0 30.9 27.6 24.9
Gabon 22.7 22.6 22.4 24.7 24.7 24.4
Malaysia 15.9 15.0 13.3 29.1 28.6 23.8
Mozambique 0.1 0.1 0.1 26.6 25.0 23.1
Tanzania 0.7 0.7 0.7 21.8 20.6 19.3
Guyana 17.3 17.3 17.2 19.0 19.1 18.9
Ecuador 10.6 10.6 10.5 18.3 18.5 18.1
Thailand 5.9 5.9 5.8 19.8 19.0 17.7
Philippines 4.6 4.5 4.4 18.3 18.1 17.4
Paraguay 3.5 3.0 2.5 23.9 20.2 16.6
Zambia 0.3 0.3 0.3 18.5 17.4 16.6
Laos 8.3 8.1 7.5 19.1 17.9 15.4
Suriname 12.8 12.7 12.6 13.9 14.0 13.9
Rest of the tropics 59.6 58.0 53.9 210.1 203.5 183.3
Grand Total 1,029.6 1,006.5 969.1 2,009.7 1,959.4 1,839.1
Primary forest loss Tree cover change
2002-09 2010-2019 2002-09 2010-2019
Country M ha (%) M ha (%) M ha (%) M ha (%)
Brazil -11.37 (-3.3%) -13.15 (-4.0%) -18.25 (-3.5%) -29.93 (-6.0%)
DR Congo -1.16 (-1.1%) -3.67 (-3.5%) -0.37 (-0.2%) -10.50 (-5.3%)
Indonesia -3.63 (-3.9%) -5.85 (-6.5%) -2.09 (-1.3%) -15.98 (-10.1%)
Colombia -0.54 (-1.0%) -0.96 (-1.8%) 0.17 (0.2%) -2.43 (-3.0%)
Peru -0.60 (-0.9%) -1.37 (-2.0%) 0.68 (0.9%) -2.10 (-2.7%)
Bolivia -0.90 (-2.2%) -1.84 (-4.6%) -1.67 (-2.6%) -3.75 (-6.0%)
Venezuela -0.15 (-0.4%) -0.33 (-0.9%) 0.86 (1.5%) -1.14 (-2.0%)
Angola -0.03 (-1.2%) -0.09 (-3.8%) -1.37 (-2.8%) -1.51 (-3.1%)
Central African Republic -0.05 (-0.6%) -0.11 (-1.5%) 0.15 (0.3%) -0.49 (-1.0%)
Papua New Guinea -0.19 (-0.6%) -0.55 (-1.7%) 0.04 (0.1%) -1.05 (-2.4%)
Mexico -0.20 (-2.1%) -0.40 (-4.4%) -0.81 (-1.9%) -2.22 (-5.2%)
China -0.03 (-1.9%) -0.04 (-2.4%) -1.67 (-3.9%) -2.66 (-6.5%)
Myanmar -0.19 (-1.4%) -0.38 (-2.8%) -1.90 (-4.4%) -2.70 (-6.6%)
India -0.13 (-1.2%) -0.20 (-2.0%) -3.67 (-10.5%) -1.18 (-3.8%)
Cameroon -0.11 (-0.6%) -0.50 (-2.6%) -0.96 (-3.1%) -1.02 (-3.4%)
Republic of Congo -0.07 (-0.3%) -0.25 (-1.2%) 0.28 (1.0%) -0.60 (-2.2%)
Argentina -0.19 (-4.4%) -0.21 (-5.0%) -3.31 (-10.7%) -2.69 (-9.8%)
Gabon -0.08 (-0.3%) -0.16 (-0.7%) 0.02 (0.1%) -0.29 (-1.2%)
Malaysia -0.98 (-6.2%) -1.65 (-11.0%) -0.47 (-1.6%) -4.84 (-16.9%)
Mozambique 0.00 (-1.6%) -0.01 (-7.5%) -1.60 (-6.0%) -1.95 (-7.8%)
Tanzania -0.01 (-0.9%) -0.02 (-2.8%) -1.21 (-5.5%) -1.31 (-6.3%)
Guyana -0.03 (-0.2%) -0.09 (-0.5%) 0.07 (0.3%) -0.14 (-0.8%)
Ecuador -0.05 (-0.5%) -0.12 (-1.2%) 0.20 (1.1%) -0.43 (-2.3%)
Thailand -0.07 (-1.2%) -0.05 (-0.9%) -0.75 (-3.8%) -1.31 (-6.9%)
Philippines -0.05 (-1.1%) -0.09 (-2.1%) -0.18 (-1.0%) -0.80 (-4.4%)
Paraguay -0.46 (-13.3%) -0.53 (-17.7%) -3.69 (-15.4%) -3.60 (-17.8%)
Zambia 0.00 (-1.0%) -0.02 (-6.5%) -1.07 (-5.8%) -0.77 (-4.4%)
Laos -0.23 (-2.7%) -0.55 (-6.8%) -1.15 (-6.0%) -2.58 (-14.4%)
Suriname -0.02 (-0.2%) -0.10 (-0.8%) 0.05 (0.4%) -0.14 (-1.0%)
Rest of the tropics -1.59 (-2.7%) -4.04 (-7.0%) -6.59 (-3.1%) -20.17 (-9.9%)
Grand Total -23.11 (-2.2%) -37.34 (-3.7%) -50.27 (-2.5%) -120.27 (-6.1%)

Chapter 2:

RAINFOREST STRUCTURE

Rainforests are characterized by a unique vegetative structure consisting of several vertical layers including the overstory, canopy, understory, shrub layer, and ground level. The canopy refers to the dense ceiling of leaves and tree branches formed by closely spaced forest trees. The upper canopy is 100-130 feet above the forest floor, penetrated by scattered emergent trees, 130 feet or higher, that make up the level known as the overstory. Below the canopy ceiling are multiple leaf and branch levels known collectively as the understory. The lowest part of the understory, 5-20 feet (1.5-6 meters) above the floor, is known as the shrub layer, made up of shrubby plants and tree saplings.

Chapter 3:

RAINFOREST BIODIVERSITY

Tropical rainforests support the greatest diversity of living organisms on Earth. Although they cover less than 2 percent of Earth’s surface, rainforests house more than 50 percent of the plants and animals on the planet.

There are several reasons why rainforests are so diverse. Some important factors are:

While species everywhere are known for utilizing symbiotic relationships with other species to survive, the biological phenomenon is particularly abundant in rainforests.

Chapter 4:

THE RAINFOREST CANOPY

In the rainforest most plant and animal life is not found on the forest floor, but in the leafy world known as the canopy. The canopy, which may be over 100 feet (30 m) above the ground, is made up of the overlapping branches and leaves of rainforest trees. Scientists estimate that more than half of life in the rainforest is found in the trees, making this the richest habitat for plant and animal life.

The conditions of the canopy are markedly different from the conditions of the forest floor. During the day, the canopy is drier and hotter than other parts of the forest, and the plants and animals that live there have adapted accordingly. For example, because the amount of leaves in the canopy can make it difficult to see more than a few feet, many canopy animals rely on loud calls or lyrical songs for communication. Gaps between trees mean that some canopy animals fly, glide, or jump to move about in the treetops. Meanwhile plants have evolved water-retention mechanisms like waxy leaves.

Scientists have long been interested in studying the canopy, but the height of trees made research difficult until recently. Today the canopy is commonly accessed using climbing gear, rope bridges, ladders, and towers. Researchers are even using model airplanes and quadcopters outfitted with special sensors — conservation drones — to study the canopy.

Chapter 5:

The rainforest floor

The rainforest floor is often dark and humid due to constant shade from the leaves of canopy trees. The canopy not only blocks out sunlight, but dampens wind and rain, and limits shrub growth.

Despite its constant shade, the ground floor of the rainforest is the site for important interactions and complex relationships. The forest floor is one of the principal sites of decomposition, a process paramount for the continuance of the forest as a whole. It provides support for trees responsible for the formation of the canopy and is also home to some of the rainforest's best-known species, including gorillas, tigers, tapirs, and elephants, among others.

Rainforest in Tangkoko National Park, North Sulawesi Province, Indonesia in 2017. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

Chapter 6:

Rainforest waters

Tropical rainforests support some of the largest rivers in the world, like the Amazon, Mekong, Negro, Orinoco, and Congo. These mega-rivers are fed by countless smaller tributaries, streams, and creeks. For example, the Amazon alone has some 1,100 tributaries, 17 of which are over 1,000 miles long. Although large tropical rivers are fairly uniform in appearance and water composition, their tributaries vary greatly.

Rainforest waters are home to a wealth of wildlife that is nearly as diverse as the biota on land. For example, more than 5,600 species of fish have been identified in the Amazon Basin alone.

But like rainforests, tropical ecosystems are also threatened. Dams, deforestation, channelization and dredging, pollution, mining, and overfishing are chief dangers.

Chapter 7:

Rainforest people

Tropical rainforests have long been home to tribal peoples who rely on their surroundings for food, shelter, and medicines. Today very few forest people live in traditional ways; most have been displaced by outside settlers, have been forced to give up their lifestyles by governments, or have chosen to adopt outside customs.

Of the remaining forest people, the Amazon supports the largest number of Indigenous people living in traditional ways, although these people, too, have been impacted by the modern world. Nonetheless, Indigenous peoples' knowledge of medicinal plants remains unmatched and they have a great understanding of the ecology of the Amazon rainforest.

In Africa there are native forest dwellers sometimes known as pygmies. The tallest of these people, also called the Mbuti, rarely exceed 5 feet in height. Their small size enables them to move about the forest more efficiently than taller people.

There are few forest peoples in Asia living in fully traditional ways. The last nomadic people in Borneo are thought to have settled in the late 2000's. New Guinea and the Andaman Islands are generally viewed as the last frontiers for forest people in Asia and the Pacific.

Chapter 8:

Deforestation

Every year an area of rainforest the size of New Jersey is cut down and destroyed, mostly the result of human activities. We are cutting down rainforests for many reasons, including:

In recent decades there has been an important shift in deforestation trends. Today export-driven industries are driving a bigger share of deforestation than ever before, marking a shift from previous decades, when most tropical deforestation was the product of poor farmers trying to put food on the table for their families. There are important implications from this change. While companies have a greater capacity to chop down forests than small farmers, they are more sensitive to pressure from environmentalists. Thus in recent years, it has become easier—and more ethical—for green groups to go after corporations than after poor farmers.

Rainforests are also threatened by climate change, which is contributing to droughts in parts of the Amazon and Southeast Asia. Drought causes die-offs of trees and dries out leaf litter, increasing the risk of forest fires, which are often set by land developers, ranchers, plantation owners, and loggers.

Tropical primary forest cover and tree cover by country in 2020

Chapter 9:

Rainforest importance

While rainforests may seem like a distant concern, they are critically important for our well-being. Rainforests are often called the lungs of the planet for their role in absorbing carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, and producing oxygen, upon which all animals depend for survival. Rainforests also stabilize climate, house incredible amounts of plants and wildlife, and produce nourishing rainfall all around the planet.

Rainforests:

Chapter 10:

Rainforest conservation

Rainforests are disappearing very quickly. The good news is there are a lot of people who want to save rainforests. The bad news is that saving rainforests will be a challenge as it means humanity will need to shift away from business-as-usual practices by developing new policies and economic measures to creative incentives for preserving forests as healthy and productive ecosystems.

Over the past decade there has been considerable progress on several conservation fronts. Policymakers and companies are increasingly valuing rainforests for the services they afford, setting aside large blocks of forests in protected areas and setting up new financial mechanisms that compensate communities, state and local governments, and countries for conserving forests. Meanwhile, forest-dependent people are gaining more management control over the forests they have long stewarded. Large international companies are finally establishing policies that exclude materials sourced via deforestation. People are abandoning rural areas, leading to forest recovery in some planes.

But the battle is far from over. Growing population and consumption means that rainforests will continue to face intense pressures. At the same time, climate change threatens to dramatically alter temperatures and precipitation patterns, potentially pushing some forests toward critical tipping points.

Thus the future of the world's rainforests in very much in our hands. The actions we take in the next 20 years will determine whether rainforests, as we currently know them, are around to sustain and nourish future generations of people and wildlife.

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Java activists risk jail for exposing shrimp farm pollution crisis (Sep 16 2024)
Java activists risk jail for exposing shrimp farm pollution crisis.JAKARTA — In 2023, environmental activist Daniel Frits Maurits Tangkilisan was sentenced to seven months in prison under Indonesia’s controversial online hate speech law. His crime? A Facebook post criticizing illegal shrimp farms operating within Karimunjawa National Park, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. Tangkilisan was part of the #SaveKarimunjawa movement, which aimed to expose the environmental […]

25-fold surge in malaria at Indonesia gold frontier raises deforestation questions (Sep 16 2024)
Gold mining erodes land cover in Pahuwato.POHUWATO, Indonesia — Lukman Ahmad managed in the end to drag himself down from the slopes of Mount Pani toward the southern coast of Indonesia’s Pohuwato district. When he staggered back into Botubilotahu village, the 56-year-old was gaunt and reeling. “I’m fine standing, and I can just about walk,” Lukman told Mongabay Indonesia. “But it […]

How the Brazilian military sabotaged protection of Indigenous people in the Amazon (Sep 16 2024)
Reports show it failed (or sabotaged) airspace control and food deliveries to the Indigenous people, who suffer from malnutrition as a result of mercury contamination from illegal mining.

Investors urge banks to cut commodity-driven deforestation (Sep 16 2024)
Investment managers with a combined $8 trillion in assets under management are urging the banks in their portfolios to eliminate deforestation from their lending and investment practices. The new guidelines call for banks to assess their ties to deforestation, set policies to reduce harm, and track their progress. The Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change […]

Hooded vultures in Ghana and South Africa on the brink, study says (Sep 16 2024)
Two hooded vultures in the Gambia. Image by Roger Sanderson via Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).High rates of inbreeding among hooded vultures in Ghana and South Africa spell trouble for their future, according to a newly published study. The study found that despite wide differences in the population size of the birds in the two countries, both face similar risks associated with low genetic diversity. It underlined the need to […]

In Chile, a copper mining project tainted by environmental damage sues 32 locals (Sep 16 2024)
The Los Pelambres mine.During the second week of October 2023, in northern Chile’s Coquimbo, Yasna Silva used social media to ask for help. She and her entire family had been sued by the Los Pelambres Mining Company. The reason? Neither she, nor the rest of the residents of her community, Pupío, had agreed to the expansion of a […]

Study highlights climate policies that actually work to reduce emissions (Sep 13 2024)
To meet the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement and avoid the worst outcomes of climate change, the world needs to rapidly reduce carbon emissions. Identifying effective policies to reach national climate goals has been challenging, but a new study published in Science examined 1500 climate policies implemented over the last two decades, and found […]

Maasai women struggle to survive amid forced evictions in conservation area (Sep 13 2024)
In 2022, the government of Tanzania began forcibly evicting thousands of Indigenous Maasai from 1,500 square kilometers, nearly 600 square miles, of their ancestral land to make way for elite tourism in the renowned Ngorongoro Conservation Area. A large group of Maasai recently blocked the road leading to Ngorongoro, protesting the evictions and denial of […]

Billions in public funds ‘wasted’ on carbon capture projects, report finds (Sep 13 2024)
A handful of governments have spent nearly 30billioninpublicfundsoncarboncaptureandhydrogenprojects,mostlyforprivatefossilfuelcompanies,overthepast40years,anewreportfromOilChangeInternationalfinds.Nationalgovernmentsareexpectedtospendanadditional30 billion in public funds on carbon capture and hydrogen projects, mostly for private fossil fuel companies, over the past 40 years, a new report from Oil Change International finds. National governments are expected to spend an additional 30billioninpublicfundsoncarboncaptureandhydrogenprojects,mostlyforprivatefossilfuelcompanies,overthepast40years,anewreportfromOilChangeInternationalfinds.Nationalgovernmentsareexpectedtospendanadditional115 billion to $240 billion in the coming decades, the […]

Wildcat miners: will cyanide displace mercury? (Sep 13 2024)
The activities of wildcat miners in the Pan Amazon has become an increasing issue of concern over the past five years; in part, because their numbers have exploded, but also because as a group, they have flagrantly violated the land rights of Indigenous people, particularly the Yanomami, but also the Murunduku and Kayapó (Brazil), the […]

Honduras taps armed forces to eliminate deforestation by 2029. Will it work? (Sep 13 2024)
Honduras this year launched a plan to eliminate deforestation by 2029, with a special focus on recovering land used by criminal groups for timber trafficking. Officials have already carried out hundreds of operations and arrested dozens of people tied to organized crime. But some experts worry that the plan doesn’t go far enough. The “Zero […]

Ugandan oil project linked with massive human rights abuses: Report (Sep 13 2024)
The Kingfisher oil project in Uganda operated by a Chinese company has resulted in numerous human rights violations, including forced evictions, inadequate compensation, threats, violence and loss of livelihoods, a new report says. Climate Rights International (CRI), a U.S.-based nonprofit, published the report on Sept. 2. “Our findings substantiate that this project is not for […]