What will happen if one day Amazon's rainforest disappears? It is not an assumption that the Amazon rainforest will disappear. If people continue to reduce the Amazon rainforests due to various needs, it will definitely happen. For pursuit of agriculture, the broad range of the Amazon region has been reduced. In addition, the proportion of deforestation is increasing in other areas. For example, access to more residential areas and overuse of timber. As a result, many trees were harvested and the forests were damaged.
Therefore deforestation has many negative effects. However, forests bring a number of important economic benefits in respect of timber harvesting and land resources. Forest destruction benefits are often more prominent than negative ones and some governments are promoting deforestation there by providing economic subsidies to agriculture. Since the likelihood of slowing the rate of deforestation is very low, the best approach may be to at least make it sustainable, new growth of wood replacing wood.
Health impacts from deforestation include short-term and wide-ranging respiratory illnesses associated with widespread incineration, long-term ecological disorders and potential climate change, and putative health hazards . These problems are even more serious for developing countries. North America and the European Union (EU) are expanding forest cover now (the "three farms" of single crops are not so diverse), but the forests in Latin America, Asia and Africa are decreasing rapidly . World trade also affects deforestation rates
Social factors such as political instability, violent armed conflict, discrimination, inequality, inequality (internal and intergenerational) do not contribute to health and sustainable development. Therefore, health and sustainable development also have moral or moral levels.
Over the past decade, the rate of deforestation in the Amazon rainforest has fallen dramatically. At the peak of deforestation in 2004, the Amazon rainforest of up to 27,400 square kilometers was cut down within a year. This is almost the same as Massachusetts. By 2014 the deforestation rate in the Amazon region has declined to 4,800 square kilometers of forest annually. This is about a sixth of the peak in 2004. According to current policy, desire to reduce Amazon deforestation to zero in the next ten years
In the 1990s, people were very concerned about Amazon's deforestation. According to the NASA Observatory, the Rhondian region in the western part of Brazil has become one of the most serious deforestation areas in the Amazon. The vegetation initially covers a land of 208,000 square kilometers, almost comparable to that of Kansas State. By 2003, however, forests had an area of more than 140,000 square kilometers, or overall vegetation declined by 32.5%. Another recent example is that Brazil's deforestation rate has increased by 30% in recent months. The impact of wildlife loss and global warming is shocking