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Deforestation In Indonesia

Indonesia’s forests are some of the most biodiverse on our planet, being a home to between 10 – 15 percent of the world’s known plants, mammals, and birds. Despite all this, in the last 50 years, more than 74 million hectares of rainforest have been lost. Drivers of deforestation in Indonesia vary from logging, agricultural expansion and operations like mining, and infrastructure expansion. However, by far the greatest threat to Indonesia’s forests comes from conversion of land to palm oil plantations – one of the main ingredients in our soaps, detergents, and makeup. Deforestation shrinks the habitat of native species like orang-outans, and diminishes a source of shelter, food, and livelihood for millions of people. It’s also bad news for carbon emissions. Peatlands, such as those across Indonesia’s lowland rainforests, store a whopping 35 billion tons of carbon. When bulldozed and replaced with plantations, thousands of tons of harmful carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere, contributing to greenhouse gases and increasing the risk of forest fires.
Why plant trees in Indonesia
- Indonesia’s forests provide habitat for endangered species such as Sumatran tigers orang-outans, over 1,500 birds and countless other species.
- Young, healthy forests can help suppress future wildfires and reduce the impact of smoke on public health. Help us prevent forest fires from spreading catastrophically.
- Our partners run village-based education programs that teach local people how to achieve conservation while balancing the needs of their community.
Deforestation in Uganda
With only 10% of Uganda’s rural population connected to the electrical grid, there is little option but to burn wood, leading to one of the worst deforestation rates in the world. Every year, 2.6% of the country’s forests are cut down for fuel, agriculture, and to make way for population growth. If things stay as they are, Uganda will lose all its forest cover in less than 25 years, the country’s National Environment Management Authority says.
Why plant trees in Uganda
- While 24% of the total land area of the country is covered in forests, on average, 90,000 hectares is lost each year for urbanization and agricultural use; a startling fact considering that only 4 million hectares remain.
- Trees promote healthy soil and will bring back much needed nutrients (by falling leaf litter) in order for the land to produce abundant crops. They will also restore moisture to the soil by returning ground water to the surface.
- Uganda is a home of more than half of the world’s mountain gorilla population