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Malaysia Deforestation Is Three Times Faster Than Rest Of Asia Combined

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ARTHUR MAX   02/ 1/11 04:33 AM ET   AP

AMSTERDAM — New satellite imagery shows Malaysia is destroying forests more than three times faster than all of Asia combined, and its carbon-rich peat soils of the Sarawak coast are being stripped even faster, according to a study released Tuesday.

The report commissioned by the Netherlands-based Wetlands International says Malaysia is uprooting an average 2 percent of the rain forest a year on Sarawak, its largest state on the island of Borneo, or nearly 10 percent over the last five years. Most of it is being converted to palm oil plantations, it said.

The deforestation rate for all of Asia during the same period was 2.8 percent, it said.

In the last five years, 353,000 hectares (872,263 acres) of Malaysia's peatlands were deforested, or one-third of the swamps which have stored carbon from decomposed plants for millions of years.

"We never knew exactly what was happening in Malaysia and Borneo," said Wetlands spokesman Alex Kaat. "Now we see there is a huge expansion (of deforestation) with annual rates that are beyond imagination."

The study was carried out by SarVision, a satellite monitoring and mapping company that originated with scientists at Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

"Total deforestation in Sarawak is 3.5 times as much as that for entire Asia, while deforestation of peat swamp forest is 11.7 times as much," the report said.

Malaysia's peatland forests are home to several endangered animals, including the Borneo Pygmy elephant and the Sumatran rhino, as well as rare timber species and unique vegetation

Kaat said the study showed deforestation was progressing far faster than the Malaysian government has acknowledged.

Scientists say the destruction of the Amazon, the rain forests of central Africa and in Southeast Asia accounts for more than 15 percent of human-caused carbon emissions blamed for global warming.

Live forests soak up carbon from the atmosphere, while burning trees release that stored carbon – contributing to climate change in two ways at once. But emissions effect is amplified when trees are felled from the peatlands and the swamps are drained for commercial plantations.

Malaysia and Indonesia produce about 85 percent of the world's palm oil, an ingredient in cooking oil, cosmetics, soaps, bread, and chocolate. It also is used as an industrial lubricant and was once considered an ideal biofuel alternative to fossil fuel, but it has fallen out of favor because of earlier reports of widespread rainforest destruction for the expansion of plantations.

Indonesia has pledged to slow deforestation in its territory, and last year Norway pledged to give Jakarta $1 billion a year to help finance an independent system of monitoring and quantifying greenhouse gas emissions.

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AMSTERDAM — New satellite imagery shows Malaysia is destroying forests more than three times faster than all of Asia combined, and its carbon-rich peat soils of the Sarawak coast are being strip...
AMSTERDAM — New satellite imagery shows Malaysia is destroying forests more than three times faster than all of Asia combined, and its carbon-rich peat soils of the Sarawak coast are being strip...
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12:37 AM on 02/19/2011
Greed is destroying the Earth....
11:00 PM on 02/07/2011
Well Im from Malaysia and yes this has been going on for years!It is just sad to read this article.Palm Oil plantation owners are just plain greedy!They also advertise here in Malaysia in the national newspaper looking for investors in to Palm Oil where by you required to invest your money and after 5-7yrs..you'll get a ROI of like maybe 30%...YES...that's what is going on...and YES there are people who invested..to all this people..Screw you!
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Tygartman
Hoping for Change in 2012
08:25 AM on 02/07/2011
We better get those Malaysians to send us some money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
In Financial Theocracy we Trust
07:19 AM on 02/07/2011
It has been many years since the Malay mainland had any forest whatsoever, well but for that small fenced off area called a park. The rest is all oil palm rows and columns. Okay, to be fair they can't take the highlands apart because oil palms don't grow there anyway. so that's something.
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03:20 AM on 02/07/2011
corporations love palm oil because they can substitute it for costlier ingredients

it's just about the most unhealthy oil one can consume; it contains saturated fat, and also raises cholesterol levels

bad for humans to consume, and ruinous for rainforests

the scary thing is it's in so many products
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12:57 AM on 02/06/2011
Well, we buy all that "stuff" made there (& elsewhere). So, they gotta use natural resources from somewhere!
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rougebaisers
02:17 PM on 02/05/2011
Why don't humans get it? WTF?
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Dr Scott
All I ask is that you make sense
02:04 PM on 02/05/2011
This sad, but I can't see any way around it. I mean, every industrialized nation has destroyed much of it's own natural environments, driven animals and plants to extinction, and wiped out entire races of people, and somehow we expect developing nations NOT to do the same? I think that's expecting a lot. As long as it is more profitable to exploit natural resources than it is to preserve them, we can only delay the
02:51 PM on 02/05/2011
The world going the way of Easter Island.
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birddogs
Dogs aren't luggage, my friend!
06:56 PM on 02/05/2011
Agree. I don't like seeing such destruction of rainforests, but it is a very marketable resource. At one time Malaysia had the largest stands of quality mahogany in the World. It's a shame that if the Malaysians are cutting at an increased rate, they are not at least replanting part of it to mahogany.
Malaysia apparently has the perfect enviroment. Palm oil probably will produce a quicker return, but that doesn't take into account the resulting erosion. The World seems to be about NOW versus long term vision.