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Amazonian deforestation may cut rainfall by a fifth
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Sept 5, 2012


Deforestation may cause rainfall in the Amazonian basin to decline disastrously, British scientists said in a study published on Wednesday by the journal Nature.

Rainfall across the vast basin could lessen by 12 percent during wet seasons and 21 percent during dry seasons, potentially inflicting astronomical costs on farmers and reducing hydro-electricity output from receding river flows.

University of Leeds researcher Dominick Spracklen and colleagues put together a computer model based on satellite data of forest cover and rainfall patterns.

Air that passes over dense tropical vegetation carries at least twice as much rain as air that passes over land with sparse vegetation, they found.

The reason for this, they said, lies in a phenomenon called evapotranspiration.

Tropical forests are highly efficient at sucking water out of the soil, much of which is then delivered to the atmosphere as vapour through leaf pores.

This not only helps to keep the local humidity of the forest at a constant level -- it also charges the winds with droplets which are deposited further afield as rain.

Deforested land, though, is far less effective at recycling water this way, which means the air above it is less moist.

Factoring in logging trends in the early part of the century, which indicate 40 percent of the Amazon will be deforested by 2050, the team say the loss of rainfall across the river basin, from east to west, will be dramatic.

Luiz Aragao, an environmental scientist at the University of Exeter, said the change in rainfall would be especially worrying for eastern and southern Amazonia.

On the assumption endorsed by many climatologists that global temperatures will rise by some three degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) by century's end compared to pre-industrialisation levels, the impacts there "could be huge," he said in a commentary.

"Changes in regional climate could exacerbate drought-related tree mortality, which in turn would reduce carbon stocks, increase fire risks and lower biodiversity.

"Such changes might also directly threaten agriculture, which generates $15 billion (12 billion euros) in Amazonia, and the hydropower industry which supplies 65 percent of Brazil's electricity."

On the plus side, Aragao said the logging trends used in Spracklen's model could be pessimistic, as Brazil has pledged to limit historical deforestation rates by 80 percent by 2020.

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Controversy in Liberian forest logging
Monrovia, Liberia (UPI) Sep 5, 2012 - Liberia's rainforests are at risk from uncontrolled logging by private companies that could deprive people of economic benefits, an environmental group warns.

A report from Global Witness says logging companies have been granted lumber rights in 60 percent of the country's rainforests in the six years since Ellen Johnson Sirleaf became president of Liberia.

Sirleaf, praised for revoking corrupt and badly managed logging companies when she took office in 2006, has already ordered a investigation into the situation.

Large amounts of illegal timber were used to finance arms sales during the country's civil war.

Global Witness alleges nearly a quarter of Liberia's landmass has been handed to logging companies using secret and often illegal permits, such as Private Use Permits designed to allow private land owners to cut trees on their property, in order to circumvent legislation.

The Liberian government put a moratorium on such permits in February.

"What we're finding out sadly is that the community is not benefiting, the government is not getting the taxes it requires," Liberian Information Minister Lewis Brown told the BBC.

"But more than that the guys are spreading out into the countryside and engage in massive deforestation and this was never the intention."

The West African nation, with some of the largest areas of rainforest in the region, can ill afford to lose control of them, environmentalists said.

"It does mark an extraordinary breakdown of law in Liberia's logging sector, a sector which has received an awful lot of support since the war both from President Johnson Sirleaf and from the United States, the European Union and other international partners," Jonathan Gant, a policy adviser at Global Witness, said.



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Liberia forests sold off in secret logging contracts: report
Dakar (AFP) Sept 4, 2012
Forty percent of Liberia's forests have been sold off in secretive and often illegal contracts, Global Witness said Tuesday, just days after the country's president announced a probe into the issuing of logging permits. An investigation by the London-based natural resource watchdog has shown how, despite efforts to reform the country's logging sector, companies have used a legal loophole to ... read more


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