Mexico in danger of losing forests
Associated Press
December 5, 2001
By Lisa J. Adams
MEXICO CITY -- Mexico could lose its tropical jungles within decades if the
government doesn't seriously hike the amount of money it allocates to deal
with deforestation, according to the environment secretary.
A study released Monday showed that Mexico lost an average of 2.72
million acres of forests and jungles each year between 1993 and 2000 nearly
twice as much as what government officials had previously estimated.
"It has been quite a shock to encounter how grave the situation
really is," said Victor Lichtinger, who blames the phenomenon primarily on
the expansion of farmland and grazing areas, and to a lesser extent on
illegal logging.
If the government doesn't spend some four to five times as much money trying
to deal with the problem of deforestation, Mexico will have no tropical
jungles left by the year 2059, he said Tuesday.
Among the jungles in critical danger, he said, are those on the Yucatan
peninsula, in the southeastern Gulf coast states of Tabasco and
Veracruz, and in southernmost Chiapas state.
Chiapas is home to the Lacandon rain forest, one of the most biologically
diverse areas in the country and one that could disappear in 10-30 years if
things don't change, Lichtinger said.
"We've lost 1.3 million acres in tropical forests alone," Lichtinger said.
All together, Mexico lost 7.8 million pine and fir forests and tropical
jungles during the seven-year period.
The loss of trees -- evident in dramatic satellite photographs taken for the
study -- also has a grave effect on other areas of the environment,
Lichtinger said.
It changes the formation and course of rivers, diminishes the soil's
fertility and capacity to retain groundwater, reduces rainfall in deforested
areas, and exacerbates natural disasters such as landslides, Lichtinger said.
He said the rapid loss of forests corresponds to a simultaneous increase in
farming and grazing land cleared by the 10 million to 15 million poor
farmers who have no other means of making a living, he said.
Mexico's confusing land-registry laws and decades of politically motivated
land reforms have made it unclear who owns the lands in question, making it
easy for squatters to occupy forests.
Lichtinger blames NAFTA-related government policies that subsidize
the expansion of farmlands in an effort to compete with the United States'
and Canada's farming subsidies.
A lesser culprit, he said, is illegal logging, an industry that state and
local governments not only have failed to stop, but from which they have
profited. Poor farmers participate in the industry by selling the most
valuable wood from the forests before burning them to create farm and
grazing land.