Report Outline
Clearing the Forests
Examining the Causes
Conservation Moves
Special Focus
Clearing the Forests
About 28 Million Acres Destroyed Annually
In The Heart of the Amazon rain forest, the Brazilian government bulldozes a new road, No. 429. Thousands of landless peasants follow its progress, swarming over the land that flanks the unpaved strip. Pioneers in quest of a dream, they hack and burn the forest to make way for crops. Lured by government land agency promises of a better life, Renato and his wife, Maria, claim a 15-acre homestead. They clear the trees in six months and plant 2,200 coffee seedlings, corn, pumpkin and melons. “I won't leave here,” says Renato, a former sharecropper, as he anticipates his first harvest. “Here one works for one's self. Plant today, eat tomorrow.” But after only a year, they give up and move on. “This land is not good. Nothing grows,” Renato says. “It's impossible to stay.”
Renato and Maria are small players in a worldwide game of ecological roulette. Each year 28 million acres (an area roughly the size of Pennsylvania) of the Earth's remaining tropical forests are cleared, primarily to grow crops but also for logging and cattle ranching. Nearly half of the rain forests already have been cleared, mostly in this century. The rural poor—whether in tropical Latin America, Africa or Asia—are the main agents of destruction, although poverty and skewed land distribution are the real causes. Sometimes the soil is good enough to support long-term farming. Most often it is poor and the land is abandoned after only two or three years of diminishing harvests. Regeneration of the forest, if it happens at all, can take hundreds of years.
Landless peasants, often with government encouragement, repeat this cycle year after year. They have no other means of meeting their daily survival needs. The governments have no land or jobs to offer elsewhere. The cumulative effect of this routine destruction adds up to an ecological disaster of major proportions. “The deforestation occurring in the tropics today is one of the great tragedies of our time,” said T. N. Khoshoo, former Secretary of the Environment of India. “It is a classic example of a Third World problem the industrial nations cannot afford to ignore.” |
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Mar. 17, 2023 |
Forever Chemicals |
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Sep. 02, 2022 |
Preserving the Seas |
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Jun. 17, 2022 |
Plastic Pollution |
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Dec. 17, 2021 |
Endangered Species |
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Nov. 06, 2020 |
Preventing Wildfires |
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Jul. 10, 2020 |
Circular Economy |
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Nov. 29, 2019 |
Climate Change and Health |
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Sep. 20, 2019 |
Extreme Weather |
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Dec. 07, 2018 |
Plastic Pollution |
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Dec. 02, 2016 |
Arctic Development |
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Apr. 22, 2016 |
Managing Western Lands |
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Jul. 18, 2014 |
Regulating Toxic Chemicals |
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Sep. 20, 2013 |
Future of the Arctic |
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Jun. 14, 2013 |
Climate Change |
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Nov. 06, 2012 |
Vanishing Biodiversity |
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Nov. 02, 2012 |
Managing Wildfires |
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Nov. 04, 2011 |
Managing Public Lands |
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Aug. 26, 2011 |
Gulf Coast Restoration |
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Jul. 2010 |
Plastic Pollution |
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Feb. 2010 |
Climate Change |
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Jan. 09, 2009 |
Confronting Warming |
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Dec. 05, 2008 |
Reducing Your Carbon Footprint |
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Nov. 2008 |
Carbon Trading |
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Oct. 03, 2008 |
Protecting Wetlands |
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Feb. 29, 2008 |
Buying Green |
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Dec. 14, 2007 |
Future of Recycling |
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Nov. 30, 2007 |
Disappearing Species |
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Feb. 2007 |
Curbing Climate Change |
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Dec. 01, 2006 |
The New Environmentalism |
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Jan. 27, 2006 |
Climate Change |
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Oct. 25, 2002 |
Bush and the Environment |
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Oct. 05, 2001 |
Invasive Species |
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Nov. 05, 1999 |
Saving Open Spaces |
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Jun. 11, 1999 |
Saving the Rain Forests |
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May 21, 1999 |
Setting Environmental Priorities |
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Mar. 19, 1999 |
Partisan Politics |
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Oct. 16, 1998 |
National Forests |
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Jun. 19, 1998 |
Environmental Justice |
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Aug. 23, 1996 |
Cleaning Up Hazardous Wastes |
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Mar. 31, 1995 |
Environmental Movement at 25 |
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Jun. 19, 1992 |
Lead Poisoning |
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May 15, 1992 |
Jobs Vs. Environment |
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Jan. 17, 1992 |
Oil Spills |
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Sep. 20, 1991 |
Saving the Forests |
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Apr. 26, 1991 |
Electromagnetic Fields: Are They Dangerous? |
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Sep. 08, 1989 |
Free Market Environmental Protection |
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Dec. 09, 1988 |
Setting Environmental Priorities |
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Jul. 29, 1988 |
Living with Hazardous Wastes |
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Dec. 20, 1985 |
Requiem for Rain Forests? |
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Aug. 17, 1984 |
Protecting the Wilderness |
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Jun. 15, 1984 |
Troubled Ocean Fisheries |
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Aug. 19, 1983 |
America's Disappearing Wetlands |
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Feb. 22, 1980 |
Noise Control |
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Nov. 16, 1979 |
Closing the Environmental Decade |
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Oct. 13, 1978 |
Toxic Substance Control |
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Feb. 27, 1976 |
Pollution Control: Costs and Benefits |
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Nov. 28, 1975 |
Forest Policy |
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May 30, 1975 |
Wilderness Preservation |
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Dec. 20, 1974 |
Environmental Policy |
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Nov. 14, 1973 |
Strip Mining |
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Dec. 01, 1971 |
Global Pollution |
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Jul. 21, 1971 |
Protection of the Countryside |
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Jan. 06, 1971 |
Pollution Technology |
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Jun. 19, 1968 |
Protection of the Environment |
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Oct. 30, 1963 |
Noise Suppression |
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