THREATS FROM HUMANKIND
The greatest cause of tropical rainforest destruction today comes from human activities, which unlike natural damage,
are unrelenting and extremely thorough. Although much of this deforestation is driven by national and international
economic forces, the majority serves no long-term purpose; it results from subsistence activities on a local level.
Many of the effects from human-induced destruction of the rainforests are probably irreversible with in our time.
The role of humans in the deforestation of the world's forests is considerable and extensive. Many activities contribute
to this loss including subsistence activities, oil extraction, logging, mining, fires, war, commercial agriculture,
cattle ranching, hydroelectric projects, pollution, hunting and poaching, the collection of fuelwood and building
material, and road construction. Under current practices, extractive industries (timber, oil, and mineral) promote
the development of short term booms that encourage permanent settlement. These booms and resulting settlements
can attract large numbers of poor seeking a better life. They clear the surrounding land for agriculture and
livestock. Meanwhile, the forest resource, whether it be oil, timber, or minerals, is rapidly depleted with little
consideration for the long term consequences. Once the resource is exhausted, the industry moves on to new areas,
leaving behind settlements dependent on the resource extraction for survival and a degraded environment. The only
resort for the settlers is to practice subsistence agriculture by clearing what forest remains. Most extractive
processes in the rainforest are not sustainable as currently practiced.
Like most environmental assets, rainforests are endangered by their status as open access resources or as common
property (Though designating rainforests as open access resources is not entirely accurate, in light of the lack
of formal property rights in certain countries and the limited capacity of many governments to manage and regulate
the rainforest lands, treating rainforest as such is adequate for this discussion). Under open access, no group
has exclusive use of rainforest resources, but essentially everyone enjoys access to the resource. There is little
incentive for conservation with the "If I do not get the resource someone else will" mentality under
these conditions and forest is depleted by industry and small farmer alike. In addition, economic incentives like
subsidies and tax breaks for forest developers distort the direct costs of harvesting and converting tropical rainforests.
The result is market failure, where the prices for tropical timber products and other goods derived from rainforest
destruction do not reflect the full environmental costs of the loss of goods and services provided by the ecosystem.
Therefore, by offering these incentives, the government effectively makes it profitable for firms to convert forest
for development purposes where it normally would not be profitable.
Another contributor to commercial forest destruction is the outstanding debts of developing countries, which causes
them to seek quick ways to raise revenue to make debt payments. However, the elemental underlying cause of deforestation
is population growth; both in developing countries which depend on forest lands for sustenance, and in developed
countries, which place more demand on forest products with their high standard of living.
We (humans) have always cleared the forest for our own interests, but in the past, the process was slow and only
limited regions were deforested, generally for subsistence agriculture. However, today, humanity is far more efficient
at clearing the forest with our advanced technology and machinery and the drive to earn profits
in the near term.
FAO 1997: Regional forest change: 1990-1997