50 Stories: Living forests for a living planet



On April 29, 2011, WWF celebrated 50 years of environmental conservation. Join us as we highlight 50 stories in 50 days, looking back at what we’ve achieved together and looking forward to another 50 years.
Forests hold carbon captive. Destroy them, and we release an extremely dangerous prisoner.
Trees absorb carbon dioxide, the main cause of climate change. But when we cut them down, the carbon they hold is eventually released back into the atmosphere – and there aren’t as many trees left to absorb it.
It’s simple: fewer trees means more carbon in the atmosphere. And that could spell disaster.

Pechoro Ilychskiy Nature Reserve, Korni Republic, Russian-Federation (c) Per Angelstam/WWF-Canon
What’s at stake?
Forests are home to a wealth of biodiversity, with up to half the world’s known species living in tropical rainforests. They are invaluable for people, as a source of livelihood for over a billion of the world’s poorest and a home to indigenous communities who rely on forests for their well-being.
But it’s not only nature and local people that suffer when forests are lost. The destruction of forests is one of the biggest sources of the greenhouse gases that cause climate change – the third largest source of carbon emissions after coal and oil.
At the moment, deforestation and forest degradation are responsible for up to a fifth of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions each year.
We urgently need to reduce emissions if we’re to avoid the consequences of climate change – from flooding to drought, food shortages to species extinction. Conserving our forests is a crucial part of this.
The story so far
It’s all very well saying we need to stop forest loss. But for many developing countries, forested land is a valuable resource. Our goal is to make it worth more alive than cut down.
We’ve helped make a scheme called REDD+ an important part of UN climate change negotiations. It’s about giving developing countries financial support to reduce emissions from deforestation and degradation (that’s what REDD stands for), while conserving forest biodiversity and improving livelihoods for local people.
With support from the Norwegian government and other partners, we’re already running REDD+ demonstration activities in places where tackling deforestation is most urgent, including the Amazon, the Congo Basin and Borneo.
Did you know?
Forests once covered half the planet’s surface. Now they cover just a quarter.
Facts and stats

  • 1.6 billion – people dependent on forests for their income worldwide
  • Up to 20% – proportion of global greenhouse gas emissions caused by deforestation and forest degradation
  • 13 million ha – area of forest lost each year, an area larger than Greece
  • 10 – countries responsible for 87% of global deforestation, with Brazil and Indonesia accounting for half of emissions from forest loss

What next?
Our target is to reduce net emissions from deforestation and forest degradation to zero by 2020.
WWF and key partners are calling on national governments to commit to preserving all remaining natural forests, ensuring forests are managed sustainably, and restoring the most damaged and degraded areas.
So far, 67 countries have signed onto a commitment to zero net deforestation and forest degradation by 2020, including the governments of Brazil and Indonesia.
What you can do
Make sure what you buy doesn’t contribute to forest loss! Ensure your food, furniture, paper and tissue are forest-friendly: look out for the FSC label and ask retailers if they’re committed to sustainable palm oil and soy.
Support our efforts to halt forest loss in the Amazon, Borneo and the Congo Basin.
Negotiations to halt climate change can be messy. Make sure your elected officials know you support strong measures to keep the planet healthy by halting forest loss – and that you’ll hold them accountable!
Be part of the celebration!