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Brazilian Amazon lost 18 trees per second in 2021: report by AFP Staff Writers Rio De Janeiro (AFP) July 18, 2022 The Brazilian Amazon lost about 18 trees per second in 2021 as deforestation in the country increased by more than 20 percent, according to a satellite data-based report released Monday. The Mapbiomas report said the country lost some 16,557 square kilometers (1.65 million hectares) of indigenous vegetation in 2021 -- an area bigger than Northern Ireland. In 2020, the area lost was 13,789 square kilometers. Nearly 60 percent of land deforested in 2021 was in the Amazon, the world's largest tropical rainforest, the report said. "In the Amazon alone, 111.6 hectares per hour or 1.9 hectares per minute were deforested, which is equivalent to about 18 trees per second," according to Mapbiomas, a network of NGOs, universities and technology companies. Clearing land for farming was the main driver, accounting for almost 97 percent, it said, with illegal mining also a major factor. In the last three years, coinciding with the presidency of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, the tree cover lost in Brazil was about 42,000 square kilometers -- "almost the area of the state of Rio de Janeiro," said the report. Data from the National Institute of Space Research (INPE) show that between January and June 2022, the Brazilian Amazon lost 3,988 square kilometers to deforestation. And government statistics state that average annual Brazilian Amazon deforestation increased by 75 percent during Bolsonaro's presidency compared to a decade earlier. Environmentalists accuse Bolsonaro of actively encouraging deforestation for economic gain and of weakening research and protection agencies.
California wildfire threat to Yosemite giant sequoias 'almost gone' Los Angeles (AFP) July 14, 2022 The wildfire threat to the world's largest trees in California has almost passed, with the blaze now spreading away from giant sequoia trees in Yosemite National Park, a forestry official said Thursday. More than 1,000 firefighters have scrambled to contain the Washburn fire, which started a week ago, and which for days threatened the world-renowned Mariposa Grove of giant sequoias. "The threat is essentially almost gone," Stanley Bercovitz, a US Forest Service spokesperson, told AFP. "Curre ... read more
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