BANGKOK: Vast concessions in Malaysia’s forests threaten millions of hectares of rich natural habitats and risk the country’s commitment to 50 per cent forest cover, a report warned Tuesday (May 28).
NGO RimbaWatch said its analysis of concessions in the country’s forest showed up to 3.2 million hectares could be slashed, potentially unleashing enormous carbon emissions and compromising key animal habitats.
“Malaysia has consistently been establishing concessions in forested areas, leaving vast areas at risk,” said RimbaWatch director Adam Farhan.
“The Malaysian rainforest is millions of years old, and when it is lost, it is lost permanently,” he told AFP.
Defining and delineating natural forest cover is complicated: some assessments categorise abandoned timber plantations or active palm oil plots as forest cover, while others only cover relatively untouched land.
So RimbaWatch used three different forest cover baselines for its research: one based on EU satellite data, one using official Malaysian data and one based on independent analysis by conservation start-up, The TreeMap.
RimbaWatch mapped concession grants onto these baselines to determine how much forest was at risk, working on the assumption that all trees in concession areas were threatened.
The analysis found 14-16 per cent of Malaysia’s remaining natural forest risks being cut down, or between 2.1 and 3.2 million hectares.
Malaysia has a longstanding commitment to maintain forest cover across 50 per cent of its territory, but that promise is at risk and may even already have been broken, RimbaWatch said.
The dataset from The TreeMap’s Nusantara Atlas estimates forest cover was already under 47 per cent by 2022.
Timber and palm oil plantations are the key drivers of deforestation risk in Malaysia, but other threats including mining and even hydropower projects.