Mining is the biggest source of forest
destruction when indirect effects are included, it says.
By Subel Rai Bhandari for RFA
2023.04.26
Mining is one of the top drivers of deforestation globally, with up to
one-third of the world’s forest ecosystems affected by its indirect impact, a
new environmental report said.
China is the biggest driver of forest destruction through mining for raw
materials, with about 18% of mining-related global forest destruction
attributable to it, according to “Extracted Forests,” prepared by the
Vienna University of Economics and Business, WWF Germany and other
organizations, released this month.
The European Union came second with 14%, and the United States stood
third with 12%.
The report said gold contributes 33% and coal another 24% to the total
demand-driven mining-related deforestation in China, which also has the largest
bauxite deforestation footprint at 13%.
“Mining is currently considered to be the fourth largest driver of
deforestation. However, this statistic only considers the direct impacts of
mining,” Tobias Kind-Rieper, the head of mining and metals research for WWF
Germany, said in the report.
Apart from excavation pits, large swathes of forest are cleared for
access roads and workers’ settlements, as mining’s role in deforestation
increases significantly considering its indirect impacts with such
infrastructure development, as well as other related issues like water and soil
contamination and illegal logging.
The report said up to 33% of the world’s forests may be affected by
these indirect impacts of mining, as “the indirect impacts of mining on forests
are often not only greater than direct impacts, but can also be more
extensive.”
The report, released on April 18, said mineral extraction has
doubled since 2000 and is accelerating at an “alarming” rate.
Forest loss and degradation can occur within a 70 kilometer (43 mile)
radius of the mining activity itself, in addition to effects on biodiversity,
the report said, adding that 77% of all mines exist within a 50 kilometer (31
mile) radius of key biodiversity areas.
“Metals are important for the development of human civilization and the
life we live today. But the footprint left by the extraction of these
commodities has a heavy toll on ecosystems,” Kind-Rieper said in a separate
statement.
According to the Global Forest Watch 2022 report, tree cover worldwide
decreased by 11% between 2011 and 2021, blamed mainly on human-driven
deforestation, including agriculture, infrastructure, urban expansion, and
mining.
Demand by just six countries, often located far from the mines, is responsible
for more than half of mining-related deforestation, the report said, adding the
resource demand is primarily concentrated in developed Global North nations and
emerging economies in Asia, though mining was destroying the forests mainly in
the Global South.
Indonesia and Myanmar in top 10
Some 84% of the deforestation for the extraction of raw materials in the
last 20 years took place in just 10 countries, the report said.
Indonesia led the chart with 3,537 square kilometers (1,366 square
miles) being destroyed for mining purposes, equivalent to 43,914 soccer pitches
and more than double its nearest competitor Brazil.
The report said 61.5% of the deforestation occurred after 2010, with 38%
between 2011 to 2015. The rates have slowed down since 2018, it said.
In Myanmar, the ninth highest in the list of mining-related
deforestation, 529 square kilometers (204 square miles) of forest were
destroyed for mining between 2001 and 2020.
The report said that most of the mining-related deforestation in Indonesia
was due to coal, accounting for 1,924 square kilometers (743 square miles) of
forest cover being lost between 2000 and 2019. That accounts for 57% of the
total global forest area lost due to the expansion of coal mining.
The EU’s global mining deforestation footprint was highest in Indonesia
(20%), mainly due to coal extraction.
Coal and gold caused the most significant destruction, with 71% of all
global deforestation directly caused by mining, which can be traced back to
these two raw materials, resulting in an estimated 6,877 square kilometers
(2,655 square miles) of forest loss over the last two decades.
Some negative consequences for wildlife and ecosystems due to
mining-related deforestation include the drastic decrease in Indochinese tigers
in the Greater Mekong region. Experts say this is due primarily to habitat
fragmentation caused by infrastructure development.
The WWF report said tropical rainforests suffered the most damage as
more than one-third of the mining-related deforestation in the last 20 years
occurred in just the last five years, which is “particularly worrying” for
biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation efforts.
“The dimensions of the forest destruction caused by global mining are
alarming,” Stefan Giljum, Professor of Ecological Economics at the Vienna
University of Economics and Business, said in a statement.
“The loss, particularly of rainforests, has accelerated rapidly due to
the growing demand for raw materials. The main responsibility for this lies with
our unsustainable production and consumption patterns.”
In many such countries, protected areas have been downgraded and
downsized to allow for more mining, which the WWF report called a “worrying
trend.”
According to Conservation International, such downgrading and downsizing
have impacted 130 million hectares (321.2 million acres) of protected land in
nearly 70 countries, including Cambodia, which downgraded about a dozen
protected areas, and Indonesia that downsized 19 places.
The WWF report called for increased funding for research into the
indirect impacts of mining-related deforestation and for environmental impact
assessments (EIAs) ahead of the start of the mining project to account for such
indirect factors.
“China, the EU and USA must take concrete steps towards bringing down
overall demand for mineral products and set targets for the reduction of
primary mineral commodities across all economic policies and strategies,” the
report said.
Edited by Mike Firn.
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/environment/china-mining-04262023170907.html
Vietnam’s estimated
bauxite export to China slated to drop in 2018
https://www.alcircle.com/news/vietnams-estimated-bauxite-export-to-china-slated-to-drop-in-2018-29660
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