A
firefighter observes the flames while trying to extinguish a fire in Cabanoes
near Louzan as wildfires rage in Portugal in October 2017
|
A sharp increase in
forest fires stoked record losses in global forest cover equivalent to the area
of New Zealand in 2016, a Global Forest Watch report said Monday.
AFP
report continues:
The
alarming pace of destruction -- 51% higher than the prior year with a
loss of 73.4 million acres (29.7 million hectares), according to data from the
University of Maryland -- was partially due to climate change that has
increased the risks and intensity of wildfires by triggering temperature rise
and drought in some places, the monitor said.
The
2015-2016 weather phenomenon El Nino, one of the strongest on record, also
played a role, having created particularly dry conditions in the tropics.
Many
of those tropical areas are not naturally prone to catching fire -- but
vulnerability increased due to poor management and was exacerbated by El Nino.
Deadly
blazes in Brazil and Indonesia were among those contributing to the loss. This
year, deadly blazes have again devastated regions of Portugal as well as
California.
Brazil's
Amazon region lost 9.1 million acres of tree cover -- more than three times
that of 2015.
And
Portugal saw some 4% of its forests go up in smoke in 2016, the
highest proportion of any other country.
Nearly
half of all forests burned in the European Union in 2016 were in Portugal,
where fire-prone eucalyptus and pine plantations along with poor soil
encouraged the deadly flames.
The
country is set to break the record for destroyed forests in 2017, with recent
disasters killing dozens of people.
Early
2016 saw one of the largest fires ever recorded in Central Africa, destroying
37,000 acres of forest in the Republic of Congo.
Last
year's Fort McMurray fire in Canada ravaged more than 1.5 million acres,
causing US$8.8 billion in damage.
Deforestation
resulting from agriculture, logging and mining also contributed to the losses.
The report urged improving fire and forest management, including early warning systems, fire bans during dry seasons and more augmented investment in forest protection and restoration.
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