Guyana’s deforestation rate dipped in 2013 – GFC

DeforestationGeorgetown: Guyana has completed its 4th Annual Assessment of Deforestation and Forest Degradation under the Monitoring Reporting and Verification System.

Interim results on 2013 deforestation rate indicate a decrease in the rate of deforestation from 0.079 per cent as the annual rate for 2012, to 0.068 per cent as the reported rate for 2013. Total deforestation is 12,702 hectares for 2013. The main reason for this decrease in deforestation rate is on account of a decrease in deforestation from mining activities which dropped to 11,487 hectares from the 2012 total of 13,664 hectares, a decline of 2177 hectares.

The decrease may be on account of new technology and more responsible and low-impact mining practices, the Natural Resources and the Environment Ministry said in a statement. It added that a significant fact influencing this decline in deforestation in mining has also been the intensified monitoring activities by the natural resources sector and its agencies in working with operators in the sector.

“Forest sector deforestation continues to be at a very low level of 330 hectares and justifies the assertions that forest harvest has had, and continues to have a very low impact on deforestation. The results are being finalised at this stage and will be incorporated into the MRVS Year 4 Report which is expected to be released shortly,” the statement read.

According to the Ministry, the findings and methods of the Year 4 assessment will be open to two layers of independent assessment: the first by a team of accuracy assessors who will be working to establish the statistical accuracy, uncertainty levels and precision of the reported results, including the deforestation rate; and the second assessment will take the form of an independent third party verification, conducted by a company contracted by the Government of Norway.

The rate of deforestation over the past 23 years has remained fairly stable between the range of 0.02 per cent and 0.08 per cent, and stands to compare quite favourably with the global average deforestation rate (computed across 85 developing forested countries as report by FAO), which is recorded at 0.52 per cent. This rate also compares very favourably with Guyana’s Reference Level as agreed under the Guyana Norway Bilateral Agreement on Forest and Climate, which is set at 0.275 per cent (computed as the mean between Guyana’s historic rate of 0.03 per cent and the global rate of 0.52 per cent).