Ethiopia: Deforestation: Difference between revisions

Line 14: Line 14:


Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the world, and its poverty and land and resource degradation seem to be part and parcel of the same vicious circle. The supreme irony is that Ethiopia is actually a country with a very diverse environment and rich biodiversity and unique ecosystems (the [[wikipedia:en:Ethiopian_Highlands|Ethiopian Highlands]], for example, elevate the country, which lies close the equator, to give an unexpectedly temperate climate). As a result, its natural resource base is vital to the economy and livelihood of much of the population – probably up to 85%.  
Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the world, and its poverty and land and resource degradation seem to be part and parcel of the same vicious circle. The supreme irony is that Ethiopia is actually a country with a very diverse environment and rich biodiversity and unique ecosystems (the [[wikipedia:en:Ethiopian_Highlands|Ethiopian Highlands]], for example, elevate the country, which lies close the equator, to give an unexpectedly temperate climate). As a result, its natural resource base is vital to the economy and livelihood of much of the population – probably up to 85%.  
Deforestation and the resulting environmental degradation is a major problem in the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and a key factor challenging food security, community livelihood and sustainable development. In the late nineteenth century, approximately 30 percent of the country was covered with forest.<ref>Ofcansky, T., & LaVerle Berry, eds. (1991) Ethiopia: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress. Available from http://countrystudies.us/ethiopia/97.htm</ref> But the clearing of land for agricultural use and the logging of trees for fuel slowly changed the look of the country’s forest cover and which sped up considerably as the 20th century progressed. Between 1955 and 1979, over 77 percent of the country’s forested area disappeared and it continues to lose 8 percent of its remaining forests annually.<ref>Winberg, E. (2010) Participatory Forestry Management in Ethiopia: Practices and Experiences. FAO Report</ref>


[[File:Ethiopia (Africa orthographic projection).svg|thumb|left|Ethiopia located on the globe]]
[[File:Ethiopia (Africa orthographic projection).svg|thumb|left|Ethiopia located on the globe]]
994

edits